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Landschuetzer, P.; Gruber, N.; Bakker, D. C. E.; Schuster, U.. |
We present a new observation-based estimate of the global oceanic carbon dioxide (CO2) sink and its temporal variation on a monthly basis from 1998 through 2011 and at a spatial resolution of 1 degrees x1 degrees. This sink estimate rests upon a neural network-based mapping of global surface ocean observations of the partial pressure of CO2 (pCO(2)) from the Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas database. The resulting pCO(2) has small biases when evaluated against independent observations in the different ocean basins, but larger randomly distributed differences exist particularly in high latitudes. The seasonal climatology of our neural network-based product agrees overall well with the Takahashi et al. (2009) climatology, although our product produces a stronger... |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Sea surface pCO(2); Neural network; Air-sea exchange of CO2; Ocean carbon cycle; Observations. |
Ano: 2014 |
URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00292/40345/38920.pdf |
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Carroll, D.; Menemenlis, D.; Adkins, J. F.; Bowman, K. W.; Brix, H.; Dutkiewicz, S.; Fenty, I.; Gierach, M. M.; Hill, C.; Jahn, O.; Landschutzer, P.; Lauderdale, J. M.; Liu, J.; Manizza, M.; Naviaux, J. D.; Roedenbeck, C.; Schimel, D. S.; Van Der Stocken, T.; Zhang, H.. |
Quantifying variability in the ocean carbon sink remains problematic due to sparse observations and spatiotemporal variability in surface ocean pCO(2). To address this challenge, we have updated and improved ECCO-Darwin, a global ocean biogeochemistry model that assimilates both physical and biogeochemical observations. The model consists of an adjoint-based ocean circulation estimate from the Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean (ECCO) consortium and an ecosystem model developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Darwin Project. In addition to the data-constrained ECCO physics, a Green's function approach is used to optimize the biogeochemistry by adjusting initial conditions and six biogeochemical parameters. Over seasonal to... |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Ocean modeling; Biogeochemistry; Ocean carbon cycle; Data assimilation; Air‐ Sea CO2 flux; Ecosystem model. |
Ano: 2020 |
URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00676/78824/81108.pdf |
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Wanninkhof, R.; Trinanes, J.. |
An increase in global wind speeds over time is affecting the global uptake of CO2 by the ocean. We determine the impact of changing winds on gas transfer and CO2 uptake by using the recently updated, global high-resolution, cross-calibrated multiplatform wind product (CCMP-V2) and a fixed monthly pCO(2) climatology. In particular, we assess global changes in the context of regional wind speed changes that are attributed to large-scale climate reorganizations. The impact of wind on global CO2 gas fluxes as determined by the bulk formula is dependent on several factors, including the functionality of the gas exchange-wind speed relationship and the regional and seasonal differences in the air-water partial pressure of CO2 gradient (pCO(2)). The latter also... |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Ocean carbon cycle; Air-sea CO2 fluxes; Wind speed. |
Ano: 2017 |
URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00661/77324/78784.pdf |
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