From “Eos” : “A New Look at Preindustrial Carbon Release from the Deep Ocean”
AT
8.18.22
Sarah Stanley
New research could help inform future studies of how the release of carbon dioxide from the Southern Ocean might affect global climate change.
A new study identifies where in the Southern Ocean carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere and where the carbon comes from. Credit: F. Alexander Haumann.
In the Southern Ocean near Antarctica, deep-ocean water upwells to the surface, where it releases carbon dioxide that entered the ocean prior to the Industrial Revolution. This process is a key component of the global carbon cycle, and recent research [Geophysical Research Letters (below)] has suggested that it returns more carbon dioxide to the atmosphere than previously thought.
Now, a new study by Chen et al. [Global Biogeochemical Cycles (below)] explores exactly where in the Southern Ocean carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere, where this carbon comes from, and how various factors combine to drive these processes.
Building on earlier research, the scientists analyzed measurements that had been collected with ships and by Argo floats, free-drifting instruments that take measurements in the subsurface ocean. These data included observations of temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, pH, alkalinity, nutrient levels, and levels of dissolved inorganic carbon.
Using those data, the researchers made detailed calculations related to the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in upwelling water, which helps to determine its ability to release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. They also explored how additional factors, such as biological processes and ocean circulation, drive spatial patterns of varying partial pressure of carbon dioxide in different ocean regions and at different depths—thereby influencing its release at the surface.
The analysis showed that preindustrial carbon dioxide is released primarily from a specific band of upwelling water that encircles Antarctica and lies between a region known as the Subantarctic Front and an inner boundary formed by the edge of the extent of sea ice during wintertime. This deep water comes from the northern Pacific and Indian Ocean basins, and it is rich in old carbon produced from organic carbon through a process known as remineralization.
The study also showed that low temperature and high alkalinity hinder carbon dioxide release from other locations of upwelling deep waters, despite their higher carbon content.
These findings could help inform future investigations of how carbon dioxide release from the Southern Ocean might affect—and be affected by—global climate change.
Science papers:
Geophysical Research Letters
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
See the full article here .
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