The northern European shelf as an increasing net sink for CO2

We developed a simple method to refine existing open-ocean maps and extend them towards different coastal seas. Using a multi-linear regression we produced monthly maps of surface ocean f CO 2 in the northern European coastal seas (the North Sea, the Baltic Sea, the Norwegian Coast and the Barents S...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Becker, Meike, Olsen, Are, Landschützer, Peter, Omar, Abdirhaman, Rehder, Gregor, Rödenbeck, Christian, Skjelvan, Ingunn
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-18-1127-2021
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/1127/2021/
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Summary:We developed a simple method to refine existing open-ocean maps and extend them towards different coastal seas. Using a multi-linear regression we produced monthly maps of surface ocean f CO 2 in the northern European coastal seas (the North Sea, the Baltic Sea, the Norwegian Coast and the Barents Sea) covering a time period from 1998 to 2016. A comparison with gridded Surface Ocean CO 2 Atlas (SOCAT) v5 data revealed mean biases and standard deviations of 0 ± 26 µatm in the North Sea, 0 ± 16 µatm along the Norwegian Coast, 0 ± 19 µatm in the Barents Sea and 2 ± 42 µatm in the Baltic Sea. We used these maps to investigate trends in f CO 2 , pH and air–sea CO 2 flux. The surface ocean f CO 2 trends are smaller than the atmospheric trend in most of the studied regions. The only exception to this is the western part of the North Sea, where sea surface f CO 2 increases by 2 µatm yr −1 , which is similar to the atmospheric trend. The Baltic Sea does not show a significant trend. Here, the variability was much larger than the expected trends. Consistently, the pH trends were smaller than expected for an increase in f CO 2 in pace with the rise of atmospheric CO 2 levels. The calculated air–sea CO 2 fluxes revealed that most regions were net sinks for CO 2 . Only the southern North Sea and the Baltic Sea emitted CO 2 to the atmosphere. Especially in the northern regions the sink strength increased during the studied period.