Controls on open-ocean North Atlantic ΔpCO2 at seasonal and interannual timescales are different
Henson, SA; Humphreys, MP; Land, PE; et al.Shutler, JD; Goddijn-Murphy, L; Warren, M
Date: 6 August 2018
Journal
Geophysical Research Letters
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU) / Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The North Atlantic is a substantial sink for anthropogenic CO2. Understanding the
mechanisms driving the sink’s variability is key to assessing its current state and predicting
its potential response to global climate change. Here we apply a time series decomposition
technique to satellite and in situ data to examine separately the ...
The North Atlantic is a substantial sink for anthropogenic CO2. Understanding the
mechanisms driving the sink’s variability is key to assessing its current state and predicting
its potential response to global climate change. Here we apply a time series decomposition
technique to satellite and in situ data to examine separately the factors (both biological and
non-biological) that affect the sea-air CO2 difference (ΔpCO2) on seasonal and interannual
timescales. We demonstrate that, on seasonal timescales, the subpolar North Atlantic ΔpCO2
signal is predominantly correlated with biological processes, whereas seawater temperature
dominates in the subtropics. However, the same factors do not necessarily control ΔpCO2 on
interannual timescales. Our results imply that the mechanisms driving seasonal variability in
ΔpCO2 cannot necessarily be extrapolated to predict how ΔpCO2, and thus the North Atlantic
CO2 sink, may respond to increases in anthropogenic CO2 over longer timescales.
Geography - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0