1251 / 2024-09-20 20:02:22
Surface water pCO2 and air-sea fluxes in the southeastern coast of China: Synthesis of a 22-year dataset of field observation
Southeastern coast of China;,Surface water pCO2;,Air-sea CO2 flux;,Seasonal variability;,Spatial variability
Session 18 - The River-Estuary-Bay Continuum: Unveiling the Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles Under Global Change
Abstract Accepted
The air-sea CO2 flux in marginal seas is an important component of the global ocean carbon cycle. Long-term field observations are crucial for scientific estimation of the complex and variable air-sea CO2 fluxes in marginal seas. Located between the East China Sea and the northern South China Sea, the southeastern coast of China has large potential of CO2 sink, but studies of air-sea CO2 fluxes in this area are very limited. By combining sea surface CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) and auxiliary parameter data from 51 cruises from 2001 to 2022, air-sea CO2 fluxes in the southeastern coast of China were estimated. Surface water pCO2 exhibited conspicuous spatial and temporal variabilities. Surface water was high in summer (373±34 μatm) and fall (390±26 μatm), but low in spring (359±19 μatm) and winter (349±20 μatm). Surface water pCO2 was primarily modulated by vertical mixing and cooling during cold seasons, and coastal upwelling, biological productivity and other factors in warm seasons. Normalized to the average temperature, NpCO2increased linearly with latitude the South of Taiwan Shoal. Air-sea CO2 fluxes exhibited strong seasonal variations. It was a strong sink of -9.4±5.5 mmol m−2 d-1 in winter, a moderate sink of -3.4±3.7 mmol m−2 d-1 in spring and near equilibrium with the atmosphere in summer with air-sea CO2 fluxes of -0.5±2.7 mmol m−2 d-1. However, it was a weak source of 3.4±6.7 mmol m−2 d-1 in fall. The area-weighted annual average air-sea CO2 flux was -2.7±5.9 mmol m−2 d-1, indicating a moderate sink annually.