
Winter mesoscale variations of carbonate system parameters and estimates of CO 2 fluxes in the Gulf of Cadiz, northeast Atlantic Ocean (February 1998)
Author(s) -
GonzálezDávila Melchor,
Magdalena SantanaCasiano J.,
Dafner Evgeny V.
Publication year - 2003
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 - 10.1029/2001jc001243
Subject(s) - water mass , oceanography , mesoscale meteorology , seawater , mediterranean sea , dissolved organic carbon , north atlantic deep water , thermohaline circulation , carbonate , continental shelf , surface water , sink (geography) , total organic carbon , water column , geology , alkalinity , environmental science , colored dissolved organic matter , carbon cycle , mediterranean climate , nutrient , environmental chemistry , chemistry , phytoplankton , cartography , organic chemistry , ecosystem , environmental engineering , geography , biology , ecology
Further observations with small spatial and temporal resolutions conducted during different seasons are required in order fully to understand the role that shelves play in the global carbon cycle. The components of the carbonate system (total alkalinity, pH in the total scale, total dissolved inorganic carbon, and CO 2 fugacity), and dissolved oxygen, nutrients, and phytopigments were studied along the mesoscale section over the continental shelf and slope in the Gulf of Cadiz in February 1998. All the chemical properties clearly distinguish four different water masses: Gulf of Cadiz Water, North Atlantic Surface Water, North Atlantic Central Water, and Mediterranean Water. From the thermohaline properties and applied chemical conservative tracers for each water mass, a mixing model has been established which explains more than 96% of the variability in the distribution of chemical properties. The relative variation of nutrients and carbon concentrations resulting from the regeneration of organic matter was estimated. The contribution of Mediterranean water to the waters at the traverse of Cadiz varies from 15% to 40% according to this model. The difference of f CO 2 between seawater and atmosphere (Δ f CO 2 = −35 μatm) shows that the surface seawater in the Gulf of Cadiz is a sink for atmospheric CO 2 during winter with an average calculated net CO 2 flux across the air‐sea interface of about −19.5 ± 3.5 mmol m −2 d −1 . We estimate that at the traverse of Cadiz the shallow core of Mediterranean outflow carries out 1.2 • 10 4 to 2.4 • 10 4 mol inorganic carbon s −1 . This estimate is 1 order of magnitude lower than that calculated for the Mediterranean outflow in the Strait of Gibraltar.