AIR-SEA CARBON-DIOXIDE EXCHANGE IN THE NORTH PACIFIC SUBTROPICAL GYRE - IMPLICATIONS FOR THE GLOBAL CARBON BUDGET

被引:69
作者
WINN, CD [1 ]
MACKENZIE, FT [1 ]
CARRILLO, CJ [1 ]
SABINE, CL [1 ]
KARL, DM [1 ]
机构
[1] PRINCETON UNIV,DEPT GEOL & GEOPHYS SCI,PRINCETON,NJ 08544
关键词
D O I
10.1029/94GB00387
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The role of the ocean as a sink for anthropogenic carbon dioxide is a subject of intensive investigation and debate. Interest in this process is driven by the need to predict the rate of future increase of atmospheric carbon dioxide and subsequent global climatic change. Although estimates of the magnitude of the oceanic sink for carbon dioxide appear to be converging on a value of approximately 2 (Gt) C yr-1 for the 1980s, a detailed understanding of the temporal and spatial variability in the rate of exchange of carbon dioxide between the ocean and the atmosphere is not available. For example, recent modeling work and direct measurements of air-sea carbon dioxide flux produce very different estimates of the air-sea flux in the northern hemisphere. As a consequence, it has been suggested that a large unidentified oceanic carbon dioxide sink may exist in the North Pacific. As a part of our time series observations in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, we have measured dissolved inorganic carbon and titration alkalinity over a four-year period. These measurements constitute the most extensive set of observations of carbon system parameters in the surface waters of the central Pacific Ocean. Our results show that the ocean in the vicinity of the time series site is a sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide. On the basis of these observations, we present a mechanism by which the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre can be a potential sink for approximately 0.2 Gt C yr-1 of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Although our observations indicate that the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre is a sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide, the magnitude of this oceanic sink is relatively small. Our data and interpretations are therefore consistent with the argument for a relatively large sink during the 1980s in northern hemisphere terrestrial biomass. Another possibility is that the net release of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere owing to land use activities in tropical regions has been overestimated.
引用
收藏
页码:157 / 163
页数:7
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1990, CLIMATIC CHANGE IPCC
[2]  
Brewer PG, 1983, CHANGING CLIMATE REP, P188
[3]  
Broecker W. S., 1982, TRACERS SEA
[4]   INTERHEMISPHERIC TRANSPORT OF CARBON-DIOXIDE BY OCEAN CIRCULATION [J].
BROECKER, WS ;
PENG, TH .
NATURE, 1992, 356 (6370) :587-589
[5]   EVALUATION OF THE C-13 CONSTRAINT ON THE UPTAKE OF FOSSIL-FUEL CO2 BY THE OCEAN [J].
BROECKER, WS ;
PENG, TH .
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 1993, 7 (03) :619-626
[6]   ESTIMATION OF ACID DISSOCIATION-CONSTANTS IN SEAWATER MEDIA FROM POTENTIOMETRIC TITRATIONS WITH STRONG BASE .1. IONIC PRODUCT OF WATER - KW [J].
DICKSON, AG ;
RILEY, JP .
MARINE CHEMISTRY, 1979, 7 (02) :89-99
[7]   THERMODYNAMICS OF THE DISSOCIATION OF BORIC-ACID IN SYNTHETIC SEAWATER FROM 273.15-K TO 318.15-K [J].
DICKSON, AG .
DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART A-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 1990, 37 (05) :755-766
[8]  
DICKSON AG, 1991, US DOE SGRP897A SCRI
[9]   LATITUDINAL DISTRIBUTION OF SOURCES AND SINKS OF CO2 - RESULTS OF AN INVERSION STUDY [J].
ENTING, IG ;
MANSBRIDGE, JV .
TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 1991, 43 (02) :156-170
[10]  
FEARNSIDE PM, 1992, INTERCIENCIA, V17, P19