Abstract

Abstract. Ocean circulation and the marine carbon cycle can be indirectly inferred from stable and radiogenic carbon isotope ratios (δ13C and Δ14C, respectively), measured directly in the water column, or recorded in geological archives such as sedimentary microfossils and corals. However, interpreting these records is non-trivial because they reflect a complex interplay between physical and biogeochemical processes. By directly simulating multiple isotopic tracer fields within numerical models, we can improve our understanding of the processes that control large-scale isotope distributions and interpolate the spatiotemporal gaps in both modern and palaeo datasets. We have added the stable isotope 13C to the ocean component of the FAMOUS coupled atmosphere–ocean general circulation model, which is a valuable tool for simulating complex feedbacks between different Earth system processes on decadal to multi-millennial timescales. We tested three different biological fractionation parameterisations to account for the uncertainty associated with equilibrium fractionation during photosynthesis and used sensitivity experiments to quantify the effects of fractionation during air–sea gas exchange and primary productivity on the simulated δ13CDIC distributions. Following a 10 000-year pre-industrial spin-up, we simulated the Suess effect (the isotopic imprint of anthropogenic fossil fuel burning) to assess the performance of the model in replicating modern observations. Our implementation captures the large-scale structure and range of δ13CDIC observations in the surface ocean, but the simulated values are too high at all depths, which we infer is due to biases in the biological pump. In the first instance, the new 13C tracer will therefore be useful for recalibrating both the physical and biogeochemical components of FAMOUS.

Highlights

  • Carbon isotopes are often used as proxies for ocean circulation and the marine carbon cycle

  • If there is no fractionation during either air–sea gas exchange or photosynthesis, the ocean equilibrates at a uniform value of −6.5 ‰, in line with the atmosphere

  • We propose that the addition of carbon isotope ratios as tuning targets would improve the work of Williams et al (2013) because they provide an objective and straightforward way of assessing whether the balance between all of the ecological processes in the model is correct

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Summary

Introduction

Carbon isotopes are often used as proxies for ocean circulation and the marine carbon cycle. Sackett et al, 1965; Rau et al, 1989; Hollander and McKenzie, 1991; Keller and Morel, 1999), and calcium carbonate formation (Emrich et al, 1970; Turner, 1982; Ziveri et al, 2003). This is typically reported in delta (δ) notation, which is the heavy to light isotope ratio (R) of a sample relative to a standard in per mille (‰) units: δ13C =. It has been used to constrain air–sea gas exchange rates (Gruber and Keeling, 2001) and to estimate the uptake of an-

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