Abstract

Abstract. A total of fourteen hydrographic cruises from 2000 to 2008 were conducted during the spring and autumn seasons between Spain and the Southern Ocean under the framework of the Spanish research project FICARAM. The underway measurements were processed and analysed to describe the meridional air-sea CO2 fluxes (FCO2) in the covered sector of the Atlantic Ocean. The data has been grouped into different biogeochemical oceanographic provinces based on thermohaline characteristics. The spatial and temporal distributions of FCO2 followed expected distributions and annual trends reproducing the recent climatological ΔfCO2 estimations with a mean difference of −3 ± 18 μatm (Takahashi et al., 2009). The reduction in the CO2 saturation along the meridional FICARAM cruises represented an increase of 0.02 ± 0.14 mol m−2 yr−1 in the ocean uptake of atmospheric CO2. The subtropical waters in both Hemispheres acted as a sink of atmospheric CO2 during the successive spring seasons and as a source in autumn. The coarse reduction of the ocean uptake of atmospheric CO2 observed in the North Atlantic Ocean was linked to conditions of negative phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation that prevailed during the FICARAM period. Surface waters in the North Equatorial Counter Current revealed a significant long-term decrease of sea surface salinity of −0.16 ± 0.01 yr−1 coinciding with a declination of −3.5 ± 0.9 μatm yr−1 in the air–sea disequilibrium of CO2 fugacity and a rise of oceanic CO2 uptake of −0.09 ± 0.03 mol m−2 yr−1. The largest CO2 source was located in the equatorial upwelling system. These tropical waters that reached emissions of 0.7 ± 0.5 and 1.0 ± 0.7 mol m−2 y−1 in spring and autumn, respectively, showed an interannual warming of 0.11 ± 0.03 °C yr−1 and a wind speed decrease of −0.58 ± 0.14 m s−1 yr−1 in spring cruises which suggest the weakening of upwelling events associated with warm El Niño – Southern Oscillation episodes. Contrary the surface waters of the Patagonian Sea behaved as an intense sink of CO2 in March and November. The oceanic waters of the convergence of Falkland and Brazil Currents showed the strongest CO2 absorption with a rate of −5.4 ± 3.6 mol m−2 yr−1 in November. The Southern Oceans sampled in the Drake Passage behave as an average uptake rate of −1.1 ± 0.9 mol m−2 yr−1 while the distal shelf of the Livingston Island acted as a slight source of CO2 to the atmosphere.

Highlights

  • The CO2 emissions associated with human activity, such as fossil fuel burning, changes in land-use or cement production, have increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations (Keeling and Whorf, 2000; Houghton, 2003) from preindustrial levels (∼270 ppm; parts per million of volume) to present-day ones, above 384 ppm (Solomon et al, 2007)

  • The FICARAM programme has proved to be a new source of information about the changing air-se CO2 fluxes in the Atlantic Ocean

  • These measurements of the FICARAM cruises, that were independent of the surface ocean CO2 atlas recently constructed by Takahashi et al (2009), mostly reproduced the climatological estimations showing a mean f CO2 difference of −3 ± 18 μatm

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Summary

Introduction

The CO2 emissions associated with human activity, such as fossil fuel burning, changes in land-use or cement production, have increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations (Keeling and Whorf, 2000; Houghton, 2003) from preindustrial levels (∼270 ppm; parts per million of volume) to present-day ones, above 384 ppm (Solomon et al, 2007). Despite current total CO2 emissions to the atmosphere of ∼9.1 PgC yr−1 (Canadell et al, 2007) only half of them are retained in the atmospheric reservoir (Sarmiento and Gruber, 2002; Sabine et al, 2004). Oceanic and terrestrial ecosystems sequestrate important amounts of CO2, reducing atmospheric CO2 accumulation. The combined storage of land and oceans mitigates significantly the rate of global warming by quenching the global temperatures sensed in the biosphere (Siegenthaler and Sarmiento, 1993). Padin et al.: Air-Sea CO2 fluxes in the Atlantic

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