Litcius/Paper detail

Revised estimates of ocean-atmosphere CO2 flux are consistent with ocean carbon inventory

Andrew Watson, Ute Schuster, Jamie D. Shutler, Thomas Holding, Ian Ashton, Peter Landschützer, David Woolf, Lonneke Goddijn‐Murphy

2020Nature Communications357 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The ocean is a sink for ~25% of the atmospheric CO 2 emitted by human activities, an amount in excess of 2 petagrams of carbon per year (PgC yr −1 ). Time-resolved estimates of global ocean-atmosphere CO 2 flux provide an important constraint on the global carbon budget. However, previous estimates of this flux, derived from surface ocean CO 2 concentrations, have not corrected the data for temperature gradients between the surface and sampling at a few meters depth, or for the effect of the cool ocean surface skin. Here we calculate a time history of ocean-atmosphere CO 2 fluxes from 1992 to 2018, corrected for these effects. These increase the calculated net flux into the oceans by 0.8–0.9 PgC yr −1 , at times doubling uncorrected values. We estimate uncertainties using multiple interpolation methods, finding convergent results for fluxes globally after 2000, or over the Northern Hemisphere throughout the period. Our corrections reconcile surface uptake with independent estimates of the increase in ocean CO 2 inventory, and suggest most ocean models underestimate uptake.

Topics & Concepts

Atmosphere (unit)Flux (metallurgy)Sink (geography)Environmental scienceAtmospheric sciencesCarbon fluxCarbon cycleCarbon sinkNorthern HemisphereSouthern HemisphereOcean currentClimatologyCarbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphereOceanographyClimate changeMeteorologyGeologyChemistryGeographyBiologyEcosystemEcologyOrganic chemistryCartographyAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsMarine and coastal ecosystemsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
Revised estimates of ocean-atmosphere CO2 flux are consistent with ocean carbon inventory | Litcius