How deep is deep enough? Ocean iron fertilization and carbon sequestration in the Southern Ocean

Artificial ocean iron fertilization (OIF) enhances phytoplankton productivity and is being explored as a means of sequestering anthropogenic carbon within the deep ocean. To be considered successful, carbon should be exported from the surface ocean and isolated from the atmosphere for an extended pe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robinson, J., Popova, E.E., Yool, A., Srokosz, M., Lampitt, R.S., Blundell, J.R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/364276/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/364276/1/grl51570_Robinson.pdf
Description
Summary:Artificial ocean iron fertilization (OIF) enhances phytoplankton productivity and is being explored as a means of sequestering anthropogenic carbon within the deep ocean. To be considered successful, carbon should be exported from the surface ocean and isolated from the atmosphere for an extended period (e.g., the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's standard 100 year time horizon). This study assesses the impact of deep circulation on carbon sequestered by OIF in the Southern Ocean, a high-nutrient low-chlorophyll region known to be iron stressed. A Lagrangian particle-tracking approach is employed to analyze water mass trajectories over a 100 year simulation. By the end of the experiment, for a sequestration depth of 1000 m, 66% of the carbon had been reexposed to the atmosphere, taking an average of 37.8 years. Upwelling occurs predominately within the Antarctic Circumpolar Current due to Ekman suction and topography. These results emphasize that successful OIF is dependent on the physical circulation, as well as the biogeochemistry.