Abstract

Abstract. The marine CaCO3 cycle is an important component of the oceanic carbon system and directly affects the cycling of natural and the uptake of anthropogenic carbon. In numerical models of the marine carbon cycle, the CaCO3 cycle component is often evaluated against the observed distribution of alkalinity. Alkalinity varies in response to the formation and remineralization of CaCO3 and organic matter. However, it also has a large conservative component, which may strongly be affected by a deficient representation of ocean physics (circulation, evaporation, and precipitation) in models. Here we apply a global ocean biogeochemical model run into preindustrial steady state featuring a number of idealized tracers, explicitly capturing the model's CaCO3 dissolution, organic matter remineralization, and various preformed properties (alkalinity, oxygen, phosphate). We compare the suitability of a variety of measures related to the CaCO3 cycle, including alkalinity (TA), potential alkalinity and TA*, the latter being a measure of the time-integrated imprint of CaCO3 dissolution in the ocean. TA* can be diagnosed from any data set of TA, temperature, salinity, oxygen and phosphate. We demonstrate the sensitivity of total and potential alkalinity to the differences in model and ocean physics, which disqualifies them as accurate measures of biogeochemical processes. We show that an explicit treatment of preformed alkalinity (TA0) is necessary and possible. In our model simulations we implement explicit model tracers of TA0 and TA*. We find that the difference between modelled true TA* and diagnosed TA* was below 10% (25%) in 73% (81%) of the ocean's volume. In the Pacific (and Indian) Oceans the RMSE of A* is below 3 (4) mmol TA m−3, even when using a global rather than regional algorithms to estimate preformed alkalinity. Errors in the Atlantic Ocean are significantly larger and potential improvements of TA0 estimation are discussed. Applying the TA* approach to the output of three state-of-the-art ocean carbon cycle models, we demonstrate the advantage of explicitly taking preformed alkalinity into account for separating the effects of biogeochemical processes and circulation on the distribution of alkalinity. In particular, we suggest to use the TA* approach for CaCO3 cycle model evaluation.

Highlights

  • According to Sabine et al (2004), the ocean has taken up about 43 % of the anthropogenic CO2 emissions into the atmosphere since preindustrial times

  • Applying the Total alkalinity (TA)∗ approach to the output of three state-of-the-art ocean carbon cycle models, we demonstrate the advantage of explicitly taking preformed alkalinity into account for separating the effects of biogeochemical processes and circulation on the distribution of alkalinity

  • The underlying concept (Eq 1) of the TA∗ approach is that the observed alkalinity (TA) in the interior of the ocean is composed of a preformed component, TA0, a term caused by the remineralization of organic matter, TAr, and a term due to CaCO3 dissolution, usually coined TA∗

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Summary

Introduction

According to Sabine et al (2004), the ocean has taken up about 43 % of the anthropogenic CO2 emissions into the atmosphere since preindustrial times. The distributions of nutrients (e.g. phosphate), oxygen, as well as derived properties like AOU, the apparent oxygen utilization (Pytkowicz, 1971), provide suitable constraints on organic matter fluxes in the ocean (Najjar et al, 2007; Schneider et al, 2008; Kriest et al, 2010; Duteil et al, 2013). These tracers are suitable because the effects of ocean biology on them has a large signal-to-background ratio, i.e. the biotic effect is large compared with other effects. Applying these methods to evaluate actual state-of-the-art models, e.g. CMIP5, will be the subject of a future study

TA distribution and CaCO3 transformations
Modelling approach
Idealized tracers
TA0 algorithms
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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