The inter-annual variability of terrestrial carbon fluxes is characterized by complex climate feedbacks of terrestrial biospheric exchanges. In particular, extreme climate events have been shown to have the potential to contribute to a positive climate-carbon cycle feedback, to decrease carbon uptake by terrestrial ecosystems or even to release carbon to the atmosphere. In this context, understanding and quantification of different ecosystem responses to a changing climate, and in particular to extreme events, is a key target for the scientific community, in order to deliver more accurate climate services to support the accountability of actions undertaken to meet the long-term goals of international treaties and initiatives. Such initiatives are aiming at enhancing the climate change mitigation/adaptation potential of land ecosystems. To this end, one of the main impacts of the COSIF project was the enhanced understanding of the response of different ecosystems to climate extremes.
Another important impact was the advanced integration of different novel measurement techniques. This project was, to the best of our knowledge, the first to make use of joint active and passive chlorophyll fluorescence, and CO2/COS measurements to diagnose the functioning of various ecosystems and their response to climate variables.
Moreover, the COSIF project provided new insights on using SIF and COS as GPP proxies, which are crucial for further developing of both methods and will thus provide more reliable future GPP estimates required for designing and implementing decarbonization strategies.