Collaborative Research: Pacific-Arctic Carbon Synthesis - Transformations, Fluxes, and Budgets, Alaska, 2008-2010

This research effort synthesized a number of datasets to create three regional carbon budgets for the Chukchi/western Beaufort Sea, the Bering Sea, and the northern Gulf of Alaska. As waters from the North Pacific make their way through these regions a number of transformations occur that modify the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Natalie Monacci, Jeremy Mathis, Jessica Cross
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A2QV3C39P
Description
Summary:This research effort synthesized a number of datasets to create three regional carbon budgets for the Chukchi/western Beaufort Sea, the Bering Sea, and the northern Gulf of Alaska. As waters from the North Pacific make their way through these regions a number of transformations occur that modify them before they enter the central Arctic Ocean. In general, the waters exiting these shelf seas are fresher, colder, and have lower pH due to the uptake of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) and the remineralization of organic matter. Because of the importance that biogeochemical transformations have in preconditioning the waters of the central Arctic and ultimately parts of the North Atlantic it is important to gain a better understanding of how these processes impact the carbon biogeochemistry of the region. The investigators worked to better constrain the carbon budgets for three zones in the Pacific sector of the Arctic Ocean including coastal fluxes, rates of primary production and air-sea exchange of CO 2 as well as developing algorithms with predictive capabilities for carbonate mineral saturation states. The aim of this effort was to determine how physical forcing and biological responses control the marine carbon cycle including the rates of air-sea CO 2 exchange and net community production as well as ocean acidification effects in the contrasting shelf environments, and to better constrain the present stocks and fluxes of carbon and determine how climate change will affect the regional carbon cycle.