73 / 2024-09-05 15:30:33
Direct observational evidence of strong CO2 uptake in the Southern Ocean
Ocean carbon cycle,Southern Ocean,Eddy covariance
Session 25 - IGAC-SOLAS: Chemistry and physics at surface ocean and lower atmosphere
Abstract Review Pending
Dong Yuanxu / Heidelberg University;GEOMAR
Bakker Dorothee / University of Easy Anglia
Bell Thomas / Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Yang Mingxi / Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Landschützer Peter / Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ)
Hauck Judith / Alfred-Wegener-Institute
Rödenbeck Christian / Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
Kitidis Vassilis / Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Bushinsky Seth / University of Hawai’i at Mānoa
Liss Peter / University of East Anglia
The Southern Ocean is the primary region for the uptake of anthropogenic CO2 and is, therefore, crucial for Earth’s climate. However, the Southern Ocean CO2 flux estimates reveal substantial uncertainties and lack direct validation. Using seven directly measured air-sea CO2 flux datasets, we identify a 25% stronger CO2 uptake in the Southern Ocean than previously thought. Accounting for upper ocean temperature gradients and insufficient temporal resolution of flux products can bridge this flux gap. The gas transfer velocity parameterization is not the main reason for the flux disagreement. The profiling float data-based flux products and biogeochemistry models considerably underestimate the observed CO2 uptake, which may be due to the lack of representation of small-scale high-flux events. Our study suggests the need to account for the temperature effects, and fine-scale observations and flux estimates.