Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES)

The role of sea ice in the carbon cycle is minimally represented in current Earth System Models (ESMs). Among potentially important flaws, mentioned by several authors and generally overlooked during ESM design, is the link between sea-ice growth and melt and oceanic dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC)...

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Published in:Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Main Authors: Moreau, Sébastien, Vancoppenolle, Martin, Bopp, Laurent, Aumont, Oliver, Madec, Gurvan, Delille, Bruno, Tison, Jean-Louis, Barriat, Pierre-Yves, Goosse, Hugues
Other Authors: UCL - SST/ELI/ELIC - Earth & Climate
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BioOne 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/177641
https://doi.org/10.12952/journal.elementa.000122
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spelling ftunivlouvain:oai:dial.uclouvain.be:boreal:177641 2024-05-19T07:33:39+00:00 Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES) Moreau, Sébastien Vancoppenolle, Martin Bopp, Laurent Aumont, Oliver Madec, Gurvan Delille, Bruno Tison, Jean-Louis Barriat, Pierre-Yves Goosse, Hugues UCL - SST/ELI/ELIC - Earth & Climate 2016 http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/177641 https://doi.org/10.12952/journal.elementa.000122 eng eng BioOne boreal:177641 http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/177641 doi:10.12952/journal.elementa.000122 urn:ISSN:2325-1026 urn:EISSN:2325-1026 info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Elementa : science of the anthropocene, Vol. 4, no.4, p. 000122 (2016) CISM:CECI 1443 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2016 ftunivlouvain https://doi.org/10.12952/journal.elementa.000122 2024-04-24T01:23:16Z The role of sea ice in the carbon cycle is minimally represented in current Earth System Models (ESMs). Among potentially important flaws, mentioned by several authors and generally overlooked during ESM design, is the link between sea-ice growth and melt and oceanic dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA). Here we investigate whether this link is indeed an important feature of the marine carbon cycle misrepresented in ESMs. We use an ocean general circulation model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES) with sea-ice and marine carbon cycle components, forced by atmospheric reanalyses, adding a first-order representation of DIC and TA storage and release in/from sea ice. Our results suggest that DIC rejection during sea-ice growth releases several hundred Tg C yr−1 to the surface ocean, of which < 2% is exported to depth, leading to a notable but weak redistribution of DIC towards deep polar basins. Active carbon processes (mainly CaCO3 precipitation but also ice-atmosphere CO2 fluxes and net community production) increasing the TA/DIC ratio in sea-ice modified ocean-atmosphere CO2 fluxes by a few Tg C yr−1 in the sea-ice zone, with specific hemispheric effects: DIC content of the Arctic basin decreased but DIC content of the Southern Ocean increased. For the global ocean, DIC content increased by 4 Tg C yr−1 or 2 Pg C after 500 years of model run. The simulated numbers are generally small compared to the present-day global ocean annual CO2 sink (2.6 ± 0.5 Pg C yr−1). However, sea-ice carbon processes seem important at regional scales as they act significantly on DIC redistribution within and outside polar basins. The efficiency of carbon export to depth depends on the representation of surface-subsurface exchanges and their relationship with sea ice, and could differ substantially if a higher resolution or different ocean model were used. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Basin Arctic Sea ice Southern Ocean DIAL@UCLouvain (Université catholique de Louvain) Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene 4
institution Open Polar
collection DIAL@UCLouvain (Université catholique de Louvain)
op_collection_id ftunivlouvain
language English
topic CISM:CECI
1443
spellingShingle CISM:CECI
1443
Moreau, Sébastien
Vancoppenolle, Martin
Bopp, Laurent
Aumont, Oliver
Madec, Gurvan
Delille, Bruno
Tison, Jean-Louis
Barriat, Pierre-Yves
Goosse, Hugues
Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES)
topic_facet CISM:CECI
1443
description The role of sea ice in the carbon cycle is minimally represented in current Earth System Models (ESMs). Among potentially important flaws, mentioned by several authors and generally overlooked during ESM design, is the link between sea-ice growth and melt and oceanic dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA). Here we investigate whether this link is indeed an important feature of the marine carbon cycle misrepresented in ESMs. We use an ocean general circulation model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES) with sea-ice and marine carbon cycle components, forced by atmospheric reanalyses, adding a first-order representation of DIC and TA storage and release in/from sea ice. Our results suggest that DIC rejection during sea-ice growth releases several hundred Tg C yr−1 to the surface ocean, of which < 2% is exported to depth, leading to a notable but weak redistribution of DIC towards deep polar basins. Active carbon processes (mainly CaCO3 precipitation but also ice-atmosphere CO2 fluxes and net community production) increasing the TA/DIC ratio in sea-ice modified ocean-atmosphere CO2 fluxes by a few Tg C yr−1 in the sea-ice zone, with specific hemispheric effects: DIC content of the Arctic basin decreased but DIC content of the Southern Ocean increased. For the global ocean, DIC content increased by 4 Tg C yr−1 or 2 Pg C after 500 years of model run. The simulated numbers are generally small compared to the present-day global ocean annual CO2 sink (2.6 ± 0.5 Pg C yr−1). However, sea-ice carbon processes seem important at regional scales as they act significantly on DIC redistribution within and outside polar basins. The efficiency of carbon export to depth depends on the representation of surface-subsurface exchanges and their relationship with sea ice, and could differ substantially if a higher resolution or different ocean model were used.
author2 UCL - SST/ELI/ELIC - Earth & Climate
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Moreau, Sébastien
Vancoppenolle, Martin
Bopp, Laurent
Aumont, Oliver
Madec, Gurvan
Delille, Bruno
Tison, Jean-Louis
Barriat, Pierre-Yves
Goosse, Hugues
author_facet Moreau, Sébastien
Vancoppenolle, Martin
Bopp, Laurent
Aumont, Oliver
Madec, Gurvan
Delille, Bruno
Tison, Jean-Louis
Barriat, Pierre-Yves
Goosse, Hugues
author_sort Moreau, Sébastien
title Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES)
title_short Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES)
title_full Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES)
title_fullStr Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES)
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: Insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (NEMO-LIM-PISCES)
title_sort assessment of the sea-ice carbon pump: insights from a three-dimensional ocean-sea-ice biogeochemical model (nemo-lim-pisces)
publisher BioOne
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/177641
https://doi.org/10.12952/journal.elementa.000122
genre Arctic Basin
Arctic
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Arctic Basin
Arctic
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
op_source Elementa : science of the anthropocene, Vol. 4, no.4, p. 000122 (2016)
op_relation boreal:177641
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/177641
doi:10.12952/journal.elementa.000122
urn:ISSN:2325-1026
urn:EISSN:2325-1026
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.12952/journal.elementa.000122
container_title Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
container_volume 4
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