Assessing the potential long-term increase of oceanic fossil fuel CO 2 uptake due to CO 2 -calcification feedback

Plankton manipulation experiments exhibit a wide range of sensitivities of biogenic calcification to simulated anthropogenic acidification of the ocean, with the "lab rat" of planktic calcifiers, Emiliania huxleyi apparently not representative of calcification generally. We assess the impl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: T. M. Lenton, J. C. Hargreaves, J. Bijma, A. Ridgwell, I. Zondervan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2007
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Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/0f6616f78a9249fe88b64e3180e8676b
Description
Summary:Plankton manipulation experiments exhibit a wide range of sensitivities of biogenic calcification to simulated anthropogenic acidification of the ocean, with the "lab rat" of planktic calcifiers, Emiliania huxleyi apparently not representative of calcification generally. We assess the implications of this observational uncertainty by creating an ensemble of realizations of an Earth system model that encapsulates a comparable range of uncertainty in calcification response to ocean acidification. We predict that a substantial reduction in marine carbonate production is possible in the future, with enhanced ocean CO 2 sequestration across the model ensemble driving a 4–13% reduction in the year 3000 atmospheric fossil fuel CO 2 burden. Concurrent changes in ocean circulation and surface temperatures in the model contribute about one third to the increase in CO 2 uptake. We find that uncertainty in the predicted strength of CO 2 -calcification feedback seems to be dominated by the assumption as to which species of calcifier contribute most to carbonate production in the open ocean.