CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump

Coastal and marginal seas are thought to act as a continental shelf pump transporting CO2 from the atmosphere to the open oceans. The CO2 uptake in coastal seas is triggered by high biological activity increasing the CO2 concentrations of their waters which finally are transported to the open ocean....

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Main Authors: Thomas, H, Bozec, Y, Borges, Alberto, Frankignoulle, Michel, Lenhart, H, Moll, A, Nagel, K, Paetsch, J, Pempkowiak, J, Wulff, F
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/246526
https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/246526/1/agufall.pdf
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spelling ftorbi:oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/246526 2024-04-21T08:07:29+00:00 CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump Thomas, H Bozec, Y Borges, Alberto Frankignoulle, Michel Lenhart, H Moll, A Nagel, K Paetsch, J Pempkowiak, J Wulff, F 2002 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/246526 https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/246526/1/agufall.pdf en eng https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/246526 info:hdl:2268/246526 https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/246526/1/agufall.pdf open access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess American Geophysical Union Fall meeting, San Francisco, United States [US], 6-10 December 2002 Life sciences Aquatic sciences & oceanology Sciences du vivant Sciences aquatiques & océanologie conference paper not in proceedings http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18cp info:eu-repo/semantics/conferencePaper 2002 ftorbi 2024-03-27T14:50:29Z Coastal and marginal seas are thought to act as a continental shelf pump transporting CO2 from the atmosphere to the open oceans. The CO2 uptake in coastal seas is triggered by high biological activity increasing the CO2 concentrations of their waters which finally are transported to the open ocean. The North Sea and Baltic Sea located in north-west Europe are connected via the Skagerrak where the Baltic Sea water first enters the North Sea. The North Sea the provides then link to the North Atlantic Ocean. Carbon budgets for the Baltic Sea and the North Sea will be presented in order to provide evidence that in both seas the transfer of CO2, i.e. the continental shelf pump, acts in two different, but characteristic pattern. The Baltic Sea as a brackish water system collects river water and one might even call it as an estuarine system in a broader sense. Two major drainage areas provide the fresh water supply to the Baltic Sea: The Scandinavian shield supply CO2 –poor waters and the north-east European continent CO2 –rich waters. During the transport of Baltic Sea water to the North Sea the CO2 concentrations increase continuously. Riverine inputs in part control primary production in the Baltic Sea, however the major control mechanism is the winter nutrient concentrations. These are established by an interaction of production, remineralisation, export and riverine and atmospheric inputs on decadal time scale because of the residence time of the Baltic Sea water of approximately 25years. The Baltic Sea thus acts as a continental shelf pump for atmospheric CO2 which injects CO2-rich water to the Atlantic Ocean (injection pump). In contrast the North Sea water is renewed once to twice per year most notably by water from the North Atlantic Ocean. The major control mechanism of the biological activity in the North Sea are thus the continuous (and - in comparison to the Baltic Sea - high) nutrient inputs for the North Atlantic Ocean. For the CO2 export from the North Sea to the Atlantic Ocean this means that the ... Conference Object North Atlantic University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography)
op_collection_id ftorbi
language English
topic Life sciences
Aquatic sciences & oceanology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences aquatiques & océanologie
spellingShingle Life sciences
Aquatic sciences & oceanology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences aquatiques & océanologie
Thomas, H
Bozec, Y
Borges, Alberto
Frankignoulle, Michel
Lenhart, H
Moll, A
Nagel, K
Paetsch, J
Pempkowiak, J
Wulff, F
CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump
topic_facet Life sciences
Aquatic sciences & oceanology
Sciences du vivant
Sciences aquatiques & océanologie
description Coastal and marginal seas are thought to act as a continental shelf pump transporting CO2 from the atmosphere to the open oceans. The CO2 uptake in coastal seas is triggered by high biological activity increasing the CO2 concentrations of their waters which finally are transported to the open ocean. The North Sea and Baltic Sea located in north-west Europe are connected via the Skagerrak where the Baltic Sea water first enters the North Sea. The North Sea the provides then link to the North Atlantic Ocean. Carbon budgets for the Baltic Sea and the North Sea will be presented in order to provide evidence that in both seas the transfer of CO2, i.e. the continental shelf pump, acts in two different, but characteristic pattern. The Baltic Sea as a brackish water system collects river water and one might even call it as an estuarine system in a broader sense. Two major drainage areas provide the fresh water supply to the Baltic Sea: The Scandinavian shield supply CO2 –poor waters and the north-east European continent CO2 –rich waters. During the transport of Baltic Sea water to the North Sea the CO2 concentrations increase continuously. Riverine inputs in part control primary production in the Baltic Sea, however the major control mechanism is the winter nutrient concentrations. These are established by an interaction of production, remineralisation, export and riverine and atmospheric inputs on decadal time scale because of the residence time of the Baltic Sea water of approximately 25years. The Baltic Sea thus acts as a continental shelf pump for atmospheric CO2 which injects CO2-rich water to the Atlantic Ocean (injection pump). In contrast the North Sea water is renewed once to twice per year most notably by water from the North Atlantic Ocean. The major control mechanism of the biological activity in the North Sea are thus the continuous (and - in comparison to the Baltic Sea - high) nutrient inputs for the North Atlantic Ocean. For the CO2 export from the North Sea to the Atlantic Ocean this means that the ...
format Conference Object
author Thomas, H
Bozec, Y
Borges, Alberto
Frankignoulle, Michel
Lenhart, H
Moll, A
Nagel, K
Paetsch, J
Pempkowiak, J
Wulff, F
author_facet Thomas, H
Bozec, Y
Borges, Alberto
Frankignoulle, Michel
Lenhart, H
Moll, A
Nagel, K
Paetsch, J
Pempkowiak, J
Wulff, F
author_sort Thomas, H
title CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump
title_short CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump
title_full CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump
title_fullStr CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump
title_full_unstemmed CO2 supply from the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump
title_sort co2 supply from the north sea and the baltic sea to the north atlantic ocean - evidence for the continental shelf pump
publishDate 2002
url https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/246526
https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/246526/1/agufall.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source American Geophysical Union Fall meeting, San Francisco, United States [US], 6-10 December 2002
op_relation https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/246526
info:hdl:2268/246526
https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/246526/1/agufall.pdf
op_rights open access
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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