Near-Surface Stratification Due to Ice Melt Biases Arctic Air-Sea CO2 Flux Estimates

Air-sea carbon dioxide (CO2) flux is generally estimated by the bulk method using upper ocean CO2 fugacity measurements. In the summertime Arctic, sea-ice melt results in stratification within the upper ocean (top ∼10 m), which can bias bulk CO2 flux estimates when the seawater CO2 fugacity is taken...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Dong, Yuanxu, Yang, Mingxi, Bakker, Dorothee C. E., Liss, Peter S., Kitidis, Vassilis, Brown, Ian, Chierici, Melissa, Fransson, Agneta, Bell, Thomas G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2838627
https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL095266
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Summary:Air-sea carbon dioxide (CO2) flux is generally estimated by the bulk method using upper ocean CO2 fugacity measurements. In the summertime Arctic, sea-ice melt results in stratification within the upper ocean (top ∼10 m), which can bias bulk CO2 flux estimates when the seawater CO2 fugacity is taken from a ship's seawater inlet at ∼6 m depth (fCO2w_bulk). Direct flux measurements by eddy covariance are unaffected by near-surface stratification. We use eddy covariance CO2 flux measurements to infer sea surface CO2 fugacity (fCO2w_surface) in the Arctic Ocean. In sea-ice melt regions, fCO2w_surface values are consistently lower than fCO2w_bulk by an average of 39 μatm. Lower fCO2w_surface can be partially accounted for by fresher (≥27%) and colder (17%) melt waters. A back-of-the-envelope calculation shows that neglecting the summertime sea-ice melt could lead to a 6%–17% underestimate of the annual Arctic Ocean CO2 uptake. publishedVersion