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A perturbation simulation of CO 2 uptake in an ocean general circulation model
Author(s) -
Sarmiento Jorge L.,
Orr James C.,
Siegenthaler Ulrich
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/91jc02849
Subject(s) - environmental science , atmospheric sciences , carbon cycle , climatology , ocean current , atmosphere (unit) , sink (geography) , perturbation (astronomy) , flux (metallurgy) , oceanography , geology , meteorology , geography , chemistry , physics , ecology , cartography , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , ecosystem , biology
The uptake of anthropogenic CO 2 by the ocean is simulated using a perturbation approach in a three‐dimensional global general circulation model. Atmospheric p CO 2 is prescribed for the period 1750–1990 using the combined Siple ice core and Mauna Loa records. For the period 1980 to 1989, the average flux of CO 2 into the ocean is 1.9 GtC/yr. However the bomb radiocarbon simulation of Toggweiler et al. (1989 b ) shows that the surface to deep ocean exchange in this model is too sluggish. Hence the CO 2 uptake calculated by the model is probably below the actual value. The observed atmospheric increase in 1980 to 1989 is 3.2 GtC/yr, for a combined atmosphere‐ocean total of 5.1 GtC/yr. This is comparable to the estimated fossil CO 2 production of 5.4 GtC/yr, implying that other sources and sinks (such as from deforestation, enhanced growth of land biota, and changes in the ocean carbon cycle) must be approximately in balance. The sensitivity of the uptake to the gas exchange rate is small: a 100% increase in gas exchange rate gives only a 9.2% increase in cumulative oceanic uptake. Details of the penetration into different oceanic regions are discussed.

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