Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean

The Southern Ocean plays an important role in mitigating the effects of anthropogenically driven climate change. The region accounts for 43% of oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO₂). This is foreseen to change with increasing greenhouse gas emissions due to ocean chemistry and climate...

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Main Author: Gregor, Luke
Other Authors: Monteiro, Pedro M S, Vichi, Marcello, Kok, Schalk
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Oceanography 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25320
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spelling ftunivcapetownir:oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25320 2024-09-15T18:36:58+00:00 Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean Gregor, Luke Monteiro, Pedro M S Vichi, Marcello Kok, Schalk 2017 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25320 eng eng Department of Oceanography Faculty of Science University of Cape Town http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25320 Oceanography Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD 2017 ftunivcapetownir 2024-06-25T03:54:18Z The Southern Ocean plays an important role in mitigating the effects of anthropogenically driven climate change. The region accounts for 43% of oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO₂). This is foreseen to change with increasing greenhouse gas emissions due to ocean chemistry and climate feedbacks that regulate the carbon cycle in the Southern Ocean. Studies have already shown that Southern Ocean CO₂ is subject to interannual variability. Measuring and understanding this change has been difficult due to sparse observational data that is biased toward summer. This leaves a crucial gap in our understanding of the Southern Ocean CO₂ seasonal cycle, which needs to be resolved to adequately monitor change and gain insight into the drivers of interannual variability. Machine learning has been successful in estimating CO₂ in may parts of the ocean by extrapolating existing data with satellite measurements of proxy variables of CO₂. However, in the Southern Ocean machine learning has proven less successful. Large differences between machine learning estimates stem from the paucity of data and complexity of the mechanisms that drive CO₂. In this study the aim is to reduce the uncertainty of estimates, advance our understanding of the interannual drivers, and optimise sampling of CO₂ in the Southern Ocean. Improving the estimates of CO₂ was achieved by investigating: the impact of increasing the gridding resolution of input data and proxy variables, and Support vector regression (SVR) and Random Forest Regression (RFR) as alternate machine learning methods. It was found that the improvement gained by increasing gridding resolution was minimal and only RFR was able to improve on existing error estimates. Yet, there was good agreement of the seasonal cycle and interannual trends between RFR, SVR and estimates from the literature. The ensemble mean of these methods was used to investigate the variability and interannual trends of CO₂ in the Southern Ocean. The interannual trends of the ensemble confirmed trends ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Southern Ocean University of Cape Town: OpenUCT
institution Open Polar
collection University of Cape Town: OpenUCT
op_collection_id ftunivcapetownir
language English
topic Oceanography
spellingShingle Oceanography
Gregor, Luke
Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean
topic_facet Oceanography
description The Southern Ocean plays an important role in mitigating the effects of anthropogenically driven climate change. The region accounts for 43% of oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO₂). This is foreseen to change with increasing greenhouse gas emissions due to ocean chemistry and climate feedbacks that regulate the carbon cycle in the Southern Ocean. Studies have already shown that Southern Ocean CO₂ is subject to interannual variability. Measuring and understanding this change has been difficult due to sparse observational data that is biased toward summer. This leaves a crucial gap in our understanding of the Southern Ocean CO₂ seasonal cycle, which needs to be resolved to adequately monitor change and gain insight into the drivers of interannual variability. Machine learning has been successful in estimating CO₂ in may parts of the ocean by extrapolating existing data with satellite measurements of proxy variables of CO₂. However, in the Southern Ocean machine learning has proven less successful. Large differences between machine learning estimates stem from the paucity of data and complexity of the mechanisms that drive CO₂. In this study the aim is to reduce the uncertainty of estimates, advance our understanding of the interannual drivers, and optimise sampling of CO₂ in the Southern Ocean. Improving the estimates of CO₂ was achieved by investigating: the impact of increasing the gridding resolution of input data and proxy variables, and Support vector regression (SVR) and Random Forest Regression (RFR) as alternate machine learning methods. It was found that the improvement gained by increasing gridding resolution was minimal and only RFR was able to improve on existing error estimates. Yet, there was good agreement of the seasonal cycle and interannual trends between RFR, SVR and estimates from the literature. The ensemble mean of these methods was used to investigate the variability and interannual trends of CO₂ in the Southern Ocean. The interannual trends of the ensemble confirmed trends ...
author2 Monteiro, Pedro M S
Vichi, Marcello
Kok, Schalk
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Gregor, Luke
author_facet Gregor, Luke
author_sort Gregor, Luke
title Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean
title_short Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean
title_full Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean
title_fullStr Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of CO₂ fluxes in the Southern Ocean
title_sort improved estimates and understanding of interannual trends of co₂ fluxes in the southern ocean
publisher Department of Oceanography
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25320
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25320
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