Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9483421 | Journal of Marine Systems | 2005 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Measurements of the fugacity of CO2, salinity, in situ temperature, nutrients and chlorophyll-a were made in November 1997, January/February and June 1998, during the “Ocean Circulation in the Southwest Atlantic Region” program (COROAS). The surface water fugacity of CO2, fCO2(sw), in the open ocean was 362.8 μatm, corresponding to a fugacity difference between surface water and atmosphere (ÎfCO2) of +3.2 μatm in November; 425.5 μatm (ÎfCO2 = +75.0 μatm) in January/February, and 350.6 μatm (ÎfCO2 = â4.0 μatm) in June, respectively, for the latitudes south of 25.3°S. These fCO2(sw) values suggest that only during winter does this oceanic area absorb any atmospheric CO2, whereas in the remaining seasons CO2 is released into the atmosphere. North of 25.3°S CO2 was released into the atmosphere during all the seasons, with highest ÎfCO2 at the continental shelf. The contribution of biological and temperature effects to the seasonal fCO2(sw) variations was calculated by dividing the region sampled into three subsections: the continental shelf, the continental slope and the open ocean. These calculations were compared with normalized fCO2(sw) and it was concluded that the main contributions to the fCO2(sw) gradients in the open ocean are the in situ temperature and the exchange of CO2(g) with the atmosphere. In the slope and shelf zones the biological regenerative processes must also be considered. The estimated net sea-air CO2 fluxes ranged between â1.1 and 0.1 mmol mâ2 dayâ1 for the open ocean, 0.4 and 3.7 mmol mâ2 dayâ1 for the slope and 0.3 and 9.8 mmol mâ2 dayâ1 for the shelf zone, using the Wanninkhof 92 formula. It is reasonable to assume that the study area is a source of CO2 for the atmosphere and the sea-air CO2 fluxes over the continental shelf and slope could lead to refinements regarding the calculations of continental shelf pump.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Oceanography
Authors
Rosane Gonçalves Ito, Bernd Schneider, Helmuth Thomas,