Global study identifies upswing in photosynthesis driven by land, offset by oceans

The image above illustrates the annual trend in global net primary production (NPP)—or net carbon gain
Journal information: Nature Climate ChangeMore information: Contrasting biological production trends over land and ocean, Nature Climate Change (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41558-025-02375-1
- "Net primary production measures the amount of energy photosynthetic organisms capture and make available to support nearly all other life in an ecosystem," said first author Yulong Zhang, a research scientist in the lab of Wenhong Li at Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment.
- "As the foundation of food webs, net primary production determines ecosystem health, provides food and fibers for humans, mitigates anthropogenic carbon emissions and helps to stabilize Earth's climate."
- For this study, the team explored annual trends and variability in global net primary production, with a focus on the interplay between land and ocean ecosystems.
Satellite insights
- Observations from satellites offer continuous perspective on photosynthesis by plants and marine algae called phytoplankton. Specifically, specialized satellite instruments measure surface greenness, which represents the abundance of a green pigment called chlorophyll produced by photosynthetic life.
- Computer models then estimate net primary production by combining greenness data with other environmental data, such as temperature, light and nutrient variability.
The authors of the new study used six different satellite-based datasets on net primary production—three for land and three for oceans—for the years from 2003 to 2021. Using statistical methods, they analyzed annual changes in net primary production for land and, separately, for the ocean.
- They found a significant increase in terrestrial net primary production, at a rate of 0.2 billion metric tons of carbon per year between 2003 and 2021.
- The trend was widespread from temperate to boreal, or high-latitude, areas, with a notable exception in the tropics of South America.
By contrast, the team identified an overall decline in marine net primary production, of about 0.1 billion metric tons of carbon per year for the same time period. Strong declines mainly occurred in tropical and subtropical oceans, particularly in the Pacific Ocean.
All told, trends on land dominated those of the oceans: global net primary production increased significantly between 2003 and 2021, at a rate of 0.1 billion metric tons of carbon per year.
Environmental drivers
To understand the potential environmental factors at play, the team analyzed variables such as light availability, air and sea-surface temperature, precipitation and mixed layer depth—a measure that reflects the extent of mixing in the ocean's top layer by wind, waves and surface currents.
- "Rising sea surface temperatures likely reduced primary production by phytoplankton in tropical and subtropical regions," Cassar added.
- "Warmer waters can layer atop cooler waters and interfere with the mixing of nutrients essential to algal survival."
- "We observed that ocean primary production responds much more strongly to El Niño and La Niña than land primary production," ---
- "A series of La Niña events was partly responsible for a trend reversal in ocean primary production that we identified after 2015. This finding highlights the ocean's greater sensitivity to future climate variability."
Broad implications
The study points to the important role of terrestrial ecosystems in offsetting declines in net primary production among marine phytoplankton, according to the authors.
- But they added that declines in net primary production in tropical and subtropical oceans, coupled with stagnation on land in the tropics, can weaken the foundation of tropical food webs, with cascading effects on biodiversity, fisheries and local economies.
Over time, these disruptions could also compromise the ability of tropical regions to function as effective carbon sinks, potentially intensifying the impacts of climate warming.
"Whether the decline in ocean primary production will continue—and how long and to what extent increases on land can make up for those losses—remains a key unanswered question with major implications for gauging the health of all living things, and for guiding climate change mitigation," Zhang said.
"Long-term, coordinated monitoring of both land and ocean ecosystems as integrated components of Earth is essential."
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