Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability

Models project that with current CO2 emission rates the Southern Ocean surface will be undersaturated with respect to aragonite and calcite by the end of the 21st century resulting in widespread impacts on biogeochemistry and the ocean ecosystem. However, accurate assessment of future acidification...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nagrete-García, Gabriela, Lovenduski, Nicole S., DuVivier, Alice, Barnard, Holly, Evonosky, William, Varuolo-Clarke, Ariana
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University Corporation For Atmospheric Research (UCAR) 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5065/qd84-br16
https://opensky.ucar.edu/islandora/object/manuscripts:952
id ftdatacite:10.5065/qd84-br16
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.5065/qd84-br16 2023-05-15T17:50:33+02:00 Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability Nagrete-García, Gabriela Lovenduski, Nicole S. DuVivier, Alice Barnard, Holly Evonosky, William Varuolo-Clarke, Ariana 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5065/qd84-br16 https://opensky.ucar.edu/islandora/object/manuscripts:952 unknown University Corporation For Atmospheric Research (UCAR) manuscript Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5065/qd84-br16 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Models project that with current CO2 emission rates the Southern Ocean surface will be undersaturated with respect to aragonite and calcite by the end of the 21st century resulting in widespread impacts on biogeochemistry and the ocean ecosystem. However, accurate assessment of future acidification changes and impacts require a better understanding of present-day saturation state and depth of the saturation horizon in the Southern Ocean. We analyze present-day carbonate chemistry and assess the current vulnerability of the Southern Ocean with respect to ocean acidification using freely-available cruise data published in the Global Ocean Data Analysis Project Version 2 (GLODAPv2), along with an interpolated version of these data that gap fills when data have not been collected at a particular location or time. We find that the present-day saturation horizon for aragonite varies from 400-2000m depth. The aragonite saturation horizon is shallowest around 60 degrees S and deeper North and South of this latitude at 40 degrees S and 70 degrees S. The Calcite saturation horizon is shallowest in the South Pacific and along 60 degrees S. We find very low data density at the depth of the saturation horizon, which may bias the interpolated product's estimate of the horizon depth in many locations. We further assess whether predictions of the present-day horizon depth from Earth system models are consistent with these observations. Text Ocean acidification Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description Models project that with current CO2 emission rates the Southern Ocean surface will be undersaturated with respect to aragonite and calcite by the end of the 21st century resulting in widespread impacts on biogeochemistry and the ocean ecosystem. However, accurate assessment of future acidification changes and impacts require a better understanding of present-day saturation state and depth of the saturation horizon in the Southern Ocean. We analyze present-day carbonate chemistry and assess the current vulnerability of the Southern Ocean with respect to ocean acidification using freely-available cruise data published in the Global Ocean Data Analysis Project Version 2 (GLODAPv2), along with an interpolated version of these data that gap fills when data have not been collected at a particular location or time. We find that the present-day saturation horizon for aragonite varies from 400-2000m depth. The aragonite saturation horizon is shallowest around 60 degrees S and deeper North and South of this latitude at 40 degrees S and 70 degrees S. The Calcite saturation horizon is shallowest in the South Pacific and along 60 degrees S. We find very low data density at the depth of the saturation horizon, which may bias the interpolated product's estimate of the horizon depth in many locations. We further assess whether predictions of the present-day horizon depth from Earth system models are consistent with these observations.
format Text
author Nagrete-García, Gabriela
Lovenduski, Nicole S.
DuVivier, Alice
Barnard, Holly
Evonosky, William
Varuolo-Clarke, Ariana
spellingShingle Nagrete-García, Gabriela
Lovenduski, Nicole S.
DuVivier, Alice
Barnard, Holly
Evonosky, William
Varuolo-Clarke, Ariana
Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability
author_facet Nagrete-García, Gabriela
Lovenduski, Nicole S.
DuVivier, Alice
Barnard, Holly
Evonosky, William
Varuolo-Clarke, Ariana
author_sort Nagrete-García, Gabriela
title Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability
title_short Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability
title_full Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability
title_fullStr Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability
title_full_unstemmed Southern Ocean Acidification: Assessing Vulnerability
title_sort southern ocean acidification: assessing vulnerability
publisher University Corporation For Atmospheric Research (UCAR)
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5065/qd84-br16
https://opensky.ucar.edu/islandora/object/manuscripts:952
geographic Pacific
Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Pacific
Southern Ocean
genre Ocean acidification
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Ocean acidification
Southern Ocean
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5065/qd84-br16
_version_ 1766157354100850688