Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium

Deep ocean deoxygenation inferred from proxies has been used to support the hypothesis that a lower atmospheric carbon dioxide during glacial times was due to an increase in the strength of the ocean’s biological pump. This relies on the assumption that surface ocean oxygen (O2) is equilibrated with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Geoscience
Main Authors: Cliff, E, Khatiwala, S, Schmittner, A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nature Research 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:7e2a655b-975e-4b9d-ad75-65da5a2c1f2a
id ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:7e2a655b-975e-4b9d-ad75-65da5a2c1f2a
record_format openpolar
spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:7e2a655b-975e-4b9d-ad75-65da5a2c1f2a 2023-05-15T18:18:41+02:00 Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium Cliff, E Khatiwala, S Schmittner, A 2020-10-21 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:7e2a655b-975e-4b9d-ad75-65da5a2c1f2a eng eng Nature Research doi:10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:7e2a655b-975e-4b9d-ad75-65da5a2c1f2a https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Journal article 2020 ftuloxford https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z 2022-06-28T20:16:29Z Deep ocean deoxygenation inferred from proxies has been used to support the hypothesis that a lower atmospheric carbon dioxide during glacial times was due to an increase in the strength of the ocean’s biological pump. This relies on the assumption that surface ocean oxygen (O2) is equilibrated with the atmosphere such that any O2 deficiency observed in deep waters is a result of organic matter respiration, which consumes O2 and produces dissolved inorganic carbon. However, this assumption has been shown to be imperfect because of disequilibrium. Here we used an Earth system model tuned to a suite of observations, which reproduces the pattern of glacial-to-Holocene oxygenation change seen in proxy data, to show that disequilibrium plays an important role in glacial deep ocean deoxygenation. Using a novel decomposition method to track O2, we found a whole-ocean loss of 33 Pmol O2 from the preindustrial to the Last Glacial Maximum despite a 27 Pmol gain from the increased solubility due to cooler temperatures. This loss was driven by a biologically mediated O2 disequilibrium, which contributed 10% of the reduction of the O2 inventory from the solubility equilibrium in the preindustrial compared with 27% during the Last Glacial Maximum. Sea ice and iron fertilization were found to be the largest contributors to the Last Glacial Maximum deoxygenation, which occurs despite overall reduced production and respiration of organic matter in the glacial ocean. Our results challenge the notion that deep ocean glacial deoxygenation was caused by a stronger biological pump or more sluggish circulation, and instead highlight the importance and previously underappreciated role of O2 disequilibrium. Article in Journal/Newspaper Sea ice ORA - Oxford University Research Archive Nature Geoscience 14 1 43 50
institution Open Polar
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
op_collection_id ftuloxford
language English
description Deep ocean deoxygenation inferred from proxies has been used to support the hypothesis that a lower atmospheric carbon dioxide during glacial times was due to an increase in the strength of the ocean’s biological pump. This relies on the assumption that surface ocean oxygen (O2) is equilibrated with the atmosphere such that any O2 deficiency observed in deep waters is a result of organic matter respiration, which consumes O2 and produces dissolved inorganic carbon. However, this assumption has been shown to be imperfect because of disequilibrium. Here we used an Earth system model tuned to a suite of observations, which reproduces the pattern of glacial-to-Holocene oxygenation change seen in proxy data, to show that disequilibrium plays an important role in glacial deep ocean deoxygenation. Using a novel decomposition method to track O2, we found a whole-ocean loss of 33 Pmol O2 from the preindustrial to the Last Glacial Maximum despite a 27 Pmol gain from the increased solubility due to cooler temperatures. This loss was driven by a biologically mediated O2 disequilibrium, which contributed 10% of the reduction of the O2 inventory from the solubility equilibrium in the preindustrial compared with 27% during the Last Glacial Maximum. Sea ice and iron fertilization were found to be the largest contributors to the Last Glacial Maximum deoxygenation, which occurs despite overall reduced production and respiration of organic matter in the glacial ocean. Our results challenge the notion that deep ocean glacial deoxygenation was caused by a stronger biological pump or more sluggish circulation, and instead highlight the importance and previously underappreciated role of O2 disequilibrium.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cliff, E
Khatiwala, S
Schmittner, A
spellingShingle Cliff, E
Khatiwala, S
Schmittner, A
Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium
author_facet Cliff, E
Khatiwala, S
Schmittner, A
author_sort Cliff, E
title Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium
title_short Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium
title_full Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium
title_fullStr Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium
title_full_unstemmed Glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium
title_sort glacial deep ocean deoxygenation driven by biologically-mediated air-sea disequilibrium
publisher Nature Research
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:7e2a655b-975e-4b9d-ad75-65da5a2c1f2a
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation doi:10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:7e2a655b-975e-4b9d-ad75-65da5a2c1f2a
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00667-z
container_title Nature Geoscience
container_volume 14
container_issue 1
container_start_page 43
op_container_end_page 50
_version_ 1766195333390401536