Abstract

Abstract. The long-term response of CO2 fluxes to climate change at the ocean surface and within the ocean interior is investigated using a coupled climate-carbon cycle model. This study also presents the first attempt to quantify the evolution of lateral transport of anthropogenic carbon under future climate change. Additionally, its impact on regional carbon storage and uptake is also evaluated. For the 1850–2099 period, our climate change simulation predicts oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon of about 538±23 Pg C. Another simulation indicates that changes in physical climate and its associated biogeochemical feedbacks result in a release of natural carbon of about 22±30 Pg C. The natural carbon outgassing is attributed to the reduction in solubility and change in wind pattern in the Southern Hemisphere. After the anthropogenic carbon passes through the air-sea interface, it is predominantly transported along the large scale overturning circulation below the surface layer. The spatial variations in the transport patterns in turn influence the evolution of future regional carbon uptake. In the North Atlantic, a slow down in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation weakens the penetration strength of anthropogenic carbon into the deeper ocean, which leads to a reduced uptake rate in this region. In contrast, more than half of the anthropogenic carbon taken up in the high latitude Southern Ocean region (south of 58° S) is efficiently and continuously exported northward, predominantly into intermediate waters. This transport mechanism allows continuous increase in future carbon uptake in the high latitude Southern Ocean, where the annual uptake strength could reach 39.3±0.9 g C m−2 yr−1, more than twice the global mean of 16.0±0.3 g C m−2 yr−1 by the end of the 21st century. Our study further underlines the key role of the Southern Ocean in controlling long-term future carbon uptake.

Highlights

  • The World Ocean is a major sink for the anthropogenic carbon emitted since 1750 (Sabine et al, 2004; Le Quereet al., 2009)

  • Climate change resulting from higher atmospheric CO2 concentration induces different feedback mechanisms that could further complicate the prediction of future strength and distribution of oceanic carbon sinks

  • Earth system models have been employed to analyze the potential vulnerabilities of future ocean carbon uptake due to changes in the climate system, such as temperature and atmospheric circulation (Friedlingstein et al, 2006; Crueger et al, 2008)

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Summary

Introduction

The World Ocean is a major sink for the anthropogenic carbon emitted since 1750 (Sabine et al, 2004; Le Quereet al., 2009). Air-sea carbon fluxes depend on physical, chemical, and biological processes They change with increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations in a complex adjustment process. A historically important climate-carbon cycle feedback is the variability of the ocean circulation associated with past climate change. This feedback has been shown to play a major role in controlling the distribution of deep ocean carbon storage, and the regional air-sea CO2 fluxes (Wallace, 2001; Olsen et al, 2006; Takahashi et al, 2006; Toggweiler et al, 2006; Watson and Naveira-Garabato, 2006; Smith et al, 2008; Thomas et al, 2008; Cao et al, 2009). Understanding how current and future climate variability affects the time-evolving ocean circulation and the associated distribution of deep ocean carbon is important to understand future net air-sea CO2 fluxes

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