Quantifying CO2 uptake and biological productivity in the southern hemisphere oceans using atmospheric observations

In this thesis, the use of atmospheric observations for quantifying the uptake of `CO_2` and biological production in the Southern Ocean is explored. For both these processes, ocean observations appear insufficient to accurately quantify their magnitude and variability. It has been proposed that atm...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roy, TM
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21451/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21451/1/whole_RoyTillaMargaret2006_thesis.pdf
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Summary:In this thesis, the use of atmospheric observations for quantifying the uptake of `CO_2` and biological production in the Southern Ocean is explored. For both these processes, ocean observations appear insufficient to accurately quantify their magnitude and variability. It has been proposed that atmospheric observations would provide a better constraint. In the first section, we use an atmospheric inversion model to combine atmospheric and oceanic observations to investigate the southern hemisphere ocean `CO_2` uptake. From sensitivity studies that vary both the initial ocean flux distribution and the atmospheric data used in the inversion, our inversion predicts a total (ocean and land) uptake of \(1.65\) to \(1.90\) \(GtC\) `y^-1`. We assess the consistency between the mean southern hemisphere `CO_2` ocean uptake predicted by an atmospheric inversion model for the 1991-1997 period and the ocean flux estimate based on observed `∆C0_2`, as in Takahashi et al. (2002). In the Takahashi et al. (2002) paper the ocean flux estimate is referred to as T99, since the data were first released in 1999. In this study, we adopt the same name for this estimate. The inversion cannot match the large `1.8` `GtC` `y^-1` southern extratropical (20°S - 90°S) uptake of the T99 ocean flux estimate without producing either unreasonable land fluxes in the southern mid-latitudes, or increasing the mismatches between observed and simulated atmospheric `C0_2` data. The southern extratropical uptake is redistributed between the mid and high latitudes. Our results suggest that the T99 estimate of the Southern Ocean uptake south of 50°S is too large, and we hypothesize that the discrepancy reflects the inadequate representation of winter-time conditions in the T99 estimate. In the second section, we apply the methods used for estimating biological new production from air-sea oxygen fluxes and atmospheric `O_2`/`N_2` concentrations to a series of model experiments, and evaluate how well simulated new production is retrieved in the southern ...