Abstract

Abstract. The oceanic biological carbon pump is an important factor in the global carbon cycle. Organic carbon is exported from the surface ocean mainly in the form of settling particles derived from plankton production in the upper layers of the ocean. The large variability in current estimates of the global strength of the biological carbon pump emphasises that our knowledge of a major planetary carbon flux remains poorly constrained. We present a database of 723 estimates of organic carbon export from the surface ocean derived from the 234Th technique. The dataset is archived on the data repository PANGEA® (www.pangea.de) under doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.809717. Data were collected from tables in papers published between 1985 and early 2013. We also present sampling dates, publication dates and sampling areas. Most of the open ocean provinces are represented by multiple measurements. However, the western Pacific, the Atlantic Arctic, South Pacific and the southern Indian Ocean are not well represented. There is a variety of integration depths ranging from surface to 300 m. Globally the fluxes ranged from 0 to 1500 mg C m−2 d−1.

Highlights

  • The concept of the biological carbon pump, dating from the late 1970s (Eppley and Peterson, 1979), quantifies the importance of oceanic primary production in the global carbon cycle

  • We present a database of 723 estimates of organic carbon export from the surface ocean derived from the 234Th technique

  • The dataset is archived on the data repository PANGEA® under doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.809717

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of the biological carbon pump, dating from the late 1970s (Eppley and Peterson, 1979), quantifies the importance of oceanic primary production in the global carbon cycle. We focus on the 234Th technique, which has the advantage that its fundamental operation allows a downward flux rate to be determined from a single water column profile of thorium coupled to an estimate of the POC/234Th ratio in sinking matter (POC is particulate organic carbon; Buesseler et al, 1992) This is highly advantageous in that it removes the complications associated with sediment trap deployments and provides an integrated estimate of export (over a timescale of weeks) rather than a snapshot of export rates (Lampitt et al, 2008).

235 Figures
The crux of the 234Th technique
Determination of POC : 234Th ratio of sinking particles
Towards better understanding of the ocean’s biological carbon pump
54 BPLR – Boreal Polar
Conclusions
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