Michael Raupach, formerly of the CSIRO and now at the Australian National University, said
land and oceans take up about half of all CO2 emissions and help show the pace of global warming.
Despite some year-to-year variability, particularly on land, a pattern is emerging over decades suggesting the sinks "are not keeping pace with rising CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere", Professor Raupach said.
"This is partly a sign that the efficiencies of the all-important land and ocean CO2 sinks are weakening," he said.
Professor Raupach was lead author of
a paper published in Biogeosciences in July which showed that during the 1959-2012 period, about 44 per cent of the total anthropogenic CO2 emissions remained in the atmosphere.
During the period, the combined land and ocean CO2 sink rate declined by about one-third.