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    Publication Date: 2022-10-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2022. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Davila, X., Gebbie, G., Brakstad, A., Lauvset, S. K., McDonagh, E. L., Schwinger, J., & Olsen, A. How Is the ocean anthropogenic carbon reservoir filled? Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 36(5), (2022): e2021GB007055, https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GB007055.
    Description: About a quarter of the total anthropogenic CO2 emissions during the industrial era has been absorbed by the ocean. The rate limiting step for this uptake is the transport of the anthropogenic carbon (Cant) from the ocean mixed layer where it is absorbed to the interior ocean where it is stored. While it is generally known that deep water formation sites are important for vertical carbon transport, the exact magnitude of the fluxes across the base of the mixed layer in different regions is uncertain. Here, we determine where, when, and how much Cant has been injected across the mixed-layer base and into the interior ocean since the start of the industrialized era. We do this by combining a transport matrix derived from observations with a time-evolving boundary condition obtained from already published estimates of ocean Cant. Our results show that most of the Cant stored below the mixed layer are injected in the subtropics (40.1%) and the Southern Ocean (36.0%), while the Subpolar North Atlantic has the largest fluxes. The Subpolar North Atlantic is also the most important region for injecting Cant into the deep ocean with 81.6% of the Cant reaching depths greater than 1,000 m. The subtropics, on the other hand, have been the most efficient in transporting Cant across the mixed-layer base per volume of water ventilated. This study shows how the oceanic Cant uptake relies on vertical transports in a few oceanic regions and sheds light on the pathways that fill the ocean Cant reservoir.
    Description: X. Davila was supported by a PhD research fellowship from the University of Bergen. G. Gebbie was supported by U.S. NSF Grant 88075300. A. Brakstad was supported by the Trond Mohn Foundation under grant agreement BFS2016REK01. E. L. McDonagh was supported by UKRI grants Atlantic Biogeochemical fluxes (ref no. NE/M005046/2) and TICTOC:Transient tracer-based Investigation of Circulation and Thermal Ocean Change (ref no. NE/P019293/2). A. Olsen and S. K. Lauvset appreciate support from the Research Council of Norway (ICOS-Norway, project number 245972). J. Schwinger acknowledges support by the Research Council of Norway through project INES (project number 270061). Supercomputer time and storage resources were provided by the The Norwegian e-infrastructure for Research Education (UNINETT Sigma2, projects nn2980k and ns2980k).
    Keywords: Anthropogenic carbon ; Transport matrix ; Mixed-layer ; Observations ; Fluxes
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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