Sensitivity of atmospheric CO 2 to regional variability in particulate organic matter remineralization depths

The concentration of CO 2 in the atmosphere is sensitive to changes in the depth at which sinking particulate organic matter is remineralized: often described as a change in the exponent “ b ” of the Martin curve. Sediment trap observations from deep and intermediate depths suggest there is a spatia...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Wilson, Jamie, Barker, Stephen, Edwards, Neil, Holden, Philip, Ridgwell, Andy
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/62703/
https://oro.open.ac.uk/62703/1/2019_Wilson_Remineralization_Biogeosci.pdf
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-16-2923-2019
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Summary:The concentration of CO 2 in the atmosphere is sensitive to changes in the depth at which sinking particulate organic matter is remineralized: often described as a change in the exponent “ b ” of the Martin curve. Sediment trap observations from deep and intermediate depths suggest there is a spatially heterogeneous pattern of b , particularly varying with latitude, but disagree over the exact spatial patterns. Here we use a biogeochemical model of the phosphorus cycle coupled with a steady-state representation of ocean circulation to explore the sensitivity of preformed phosphate and atmospheric CO 2 to spatial variability in remineralization depths. A Latin hypercube sampling method is used to simultaneously vary the Martin curve independently within 15 different regions, as a basis for a regression-based analysis used to derive a quantitative measure of sensitivity. Approximately 30 % of the sensitivity of atmospheric CO 2 to changes in remineralization depths is driven by changes in the subantarctic region (36 to 60∘ S) similar in magnitude to the Pacific basin despite the much smaller area and lower export production. Overall, the absolute magnitude of sensitivity is controlled by export production, but the relative spatial patterns in sensitivity are predominantly constrained by ocean circulation pathways. The high sensitivity in the subantarctic regions is driven by a combination of high export production and the high connectivity of these regions to regions important for the export of preformed nutrients such as the Southern Ocean and North Atlantic. Overall, regionally varying remineralization depths contribute to variability in CO 2 of between around 5 and 15 ppm, relative to a global mean change in remineralization depth. Future changes in the environmental and ecological drivers of remineralization, such as temperature and ocean acidification, are expected to be most significant in the high latitudes where CO 2 sensitivity to remineralization is also highest. The importance of ocean circulation ...