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Monthly maps of sea surface dissolved inorganic carbon in the North Pacific: Basin‐wide distribution and seasonal variation
Author(s) -
Yasunaka Sayaka,
Nojiri Yukihiro,
Nakaoka Shinichiro,
Ono Tsuneo,
Mukai Hitoshi,
Usui Norihisa
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1002/jgrc.20279
Subject(s) - subarctic climate , oceanography , salinity , subtropics , environmental science , total inorganic carbon , geology , dissolved organic carbon , climatology , chemistry , carbon dioxide , organic chemistry , fishery , biology
We produced 84 monthly maps of sea surface dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentration for the North Pacific from 2002 to 2008. The estimated DIC concentration agrees well with DIC concentration observed from research vessels at fixed time series stations (root‐mean‐square error of 10.2 μmol kg −1 ). The spatial distribution of 7 year annual mean DIC concentration corresponds to the sea surface salinity distribution and ocean circulation. We explored DIC seasonal variation by categorizing the North Pacific into 10 areal clusters. DIC decrease from March to July was captured: more than 120 μmol kg −1 in the northwest, but less than 40 μmol kg −1 in the subtropics. After subtracting the effects of air‐sea CO 2 flux and salinity change, the residual DIC decrease from March to July can be considered as net community production (NCP): more than 14 mmolC m −2 d −1 in the boundary region between the subtropics and the subarctic extending from east coast of Japan to the date line, more than 8 mmolC m −2 d −1 in the coastal region of the subarctic, and 4–8 mmolC m −2 d −1 in the offshore region of the subarctic. The NCP corresponds well to 20–30% of the satellite‐derived net primary production.

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