1475 / 2024-09-27 16:38:08
Temporal Changes of Carbonyl Sulfide (COS) through four ocean basins
Carbonyl sulfide,Southern Ocean,western Pacific
Session 25 - IGAC-SOLAS: Chemistry and physics at surface ocean and lower atmosphere
Abstract Accepted
Li Zhou / GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Sinikka T. Lennartz / University of Oldenburg
Dennis Booge / GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Miming Zhang / Third Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources, PRC
Christa Marandino / GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Carbonyl sulfide (COS) is the most abundant reduced sulphur compound in the stratosphere and plays a role in influencing global climate. Additionally, COS has been suggested as a potential tracer of monitoring gross primary productivity on land, making an accurate understanding of its atmospheric budget of COS crucial. In earlier budget exercises, Suntharalingam et al. (2008) indicated that the COS uptake by vegetation has been underestimated, raising the possibility of an unknown oceanic COS source. However, this hypothesis remains contested. The Southern and tropical Western Pacific Oceans have been identified as important COS hotspots and potential areas with the missing source that have been both temporally and spatially undersampled (Lennartz et al., 2021; Launois et al., 2015; Whelan et al., 2018). In this study, we provide the first continuous high-resolution observations from these two critical regions, at relatively high spatial and temporal resolution, to reassess global COS emissions and compare against model estimates.