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On which timescales do gas transfer velocities control North Atlantic CO 2 flux variability?
Author(s) -
Couldrey Matthew P.,
Oliver Kevin I. C.,
Yool Andrew,
Halloran Paul R.,
Achterberg Eric P.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1002/2015gb005267
Subject(s) - environmental science , flux (metallurgy) , atlantic multidecadal oscillation , salinity , sink (geography) , carbon dioxide , climatology , north atlantic oscillation , atmospheric sciences , oceanography , geology , chemistry , geography , cartography , organic chemistry
The North Atlantic is an important basin for the global ocean's uptake of anthropogenic and natural carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), but the mechanisms controlling this carbon flux are not fully understood. The air‐sea flux of CO 2 , F , is the product of a gas transfer velocity, k , the air‐sea CO 2 concentration gradient, Δ p CO 2 , and the temperature‐ and salinity‐dependent solubility coefficient, α . k is difficult to constrain, representing the dominant uncertainty in F on short (instantaneous to interannual) timescales. Previous work shows that in the North Atlantic, Δ p CO 2 and k both contribute significantly to interannual F variability but that k is unimportant for multidecadal variability. On some timescale between interannual and multidecadal, gas transfer velocity variability and its associated uncertainty become negligible. Here we quantify this critical timescale for the first time. Using an ocean model, we determine the importance of k , Δ p CO 2 , and α on a range of timescales. On interannual and shorter timescales, both Δ p CO 2 and k are important controls on F . In contrast, pentadal to multidecadal North Atlantic flux variability is driven almost entirely by Δ p CO 2 ; k contributes less than 25%. Finally, we explore how accurately one can estimate North Atlantic F without a knowledge of nonseasonal k variability, finding it possible for interannual and longer timescales. These findings suggest that continued efforts to better constrain gas transfer velocities are necessary to quantify interannual variability in the North Atlantic carbon sink. However, uncertainty in k variability is unlikely to limit the accuracy of estimates of longer‐term flux variability.

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