Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

”The potential of upper ocean alkalinity controls for atmospheric carbon dioxide changes” Christoph Heinze University of Bergen Geophysical Institute and.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "”The potential of upper ocean alkalinity controls for atmospheric carbon dioxide changes” Christoph Heinze University of Bergen Geophysical Institute and."— Presentation transcript:

1 ”The potential of upper ocean alkalinity controls for atmospheric carbon dioxide changes” Christoph Heinze University of Bergen Geophysical Institute and Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research Co-sponsored by: EU Integrated Project CARBOOCEAN

2 higher atmospheric pCO 2 ↓ higher ocean pCO 2 /acidification ↓ suspended particulate CaCO 3 in upper water column may dissolve Apart from adverse effects on biota: Is there a significant negative feedback to CO 2 climate forcing associated with this? The question

3 Heinze, C., 2004, Simulating oceanic CaCO3 export production in the greenhouse, Geophysical Research Letters, 31, L16308 acidification feedbacks, A1B scenario: less CaCO 3 production ca. -20 ppm and less particle ballast ca. +20 ppm compensate each other POTENTIAL LIMIT? CaCO 3 export production 1750 2004 2100 2250 ballast effect

4 CO 3 2- standard run vs. observations Atlantic Pacific atmosphere 283 μatm GEOSECSMODEL

5 ↓ Biological export production rates ↓ ↑ Sediment ↑ C org CaCO 3 biogenic silica clay atm. dust

6 scenario 1 – enhanced CaCO 3 dissolution Dissolution rate constant – standard: R = k (1-Ω) 3 k=1 day -1 Ω=1-[Ca 2+ ][CO 3 2- ]/K sp R(min) = const., where water column is oversaturated for CaCO 3 Dissolution rate constant – scenario 1: R = as above but R = R(min) x 10, where water column is oversaturated for CaCO 3 in the standard run

7 scenario 1 – enhanced CaCO 3 dissolution alkalinity in upper water increases →

8 scenario 1 – CaCO 3 accumulation 0 years 100 years 1000 years 10000 years

9 scenario 2 – enhanced CaCO 3 dissolution no riverine alkalinity delivery anymore Dissolution rate constant – standard: R = k (1-Ω) 3 k=1 day -1 Ω=1-[Ca 2+ ][CO 3 2- ]/K sp R(min) = const., where water column is oversaturated for CaCO 3 Dissolution rate constant – scenario 2: R = as above but R = R(min) x 10, where water column is oversaturated for CaCO 3 in the standard run

10 scenario 2 – enhanced CaCO 3 dissolution no riverine alkalinity delivery anymore alkalinity in upper water increases less →

11 scenario 2 – CaCO 3 accumulation 0 years 100 years 1000 years 10000 years

12 Conclusions 0-1000 years: ocean acidification is not likely to induce a significant negative CO 2 feedback through upper ocean CaCO 3 dissolution alone Longer time scales: mismatch between delivery of alkalinity by rivers and enhanced CaCO 3 dissolution in the water column → potentially significant negative feedback In any case: ocean acidification may perturb sediment mixed layer globally and quasi-instantaneously

13 Sediment column 130 kyrBP up to preindustrial:

14

15 A synthetic sediment core from the equatorial Pacific

16 A synthetic sediment core from the western North Atlantic Heinze, 2001, GRL, 28(22), 4211-4214


Download ppt "”The potential of upper ocean alkalinity controls for atmospheric carbon dioxide changes” Christoph Heinze University of Bergen Geophysical Institute and."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google