. GPS News .




.
WATER WORLD
Climate change reducing ocean's carbon dioxide uptake
by Staff Writers
Madison WI (SPX) Jul 15, 2011

File image.

How deep is the ocean's capacity to buffer against climate change? As one of the planet's largest single carbon absorbers, the ocean takes up roughly one-third of all human carbon emissions, reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide and its associated global changes.

But whether the ocean can continue mopping up human-produced carbon at the same rate is still up in the air. Previous studies on the topic have yielded conflicting results, says University of Wisconsin-Madison assistant professor Galen McKinley.

In a new analysis published online July 10 in Nature Geoscience, McKinley and her colleagues identify a likely source of many of those inconsistencies and provide some of the first observational evidence that climate change is negatively impacting the ocean carbon sink.

"The ocean is taking up less carbon because of the warming caused by the carbon in the atmosphere," says McKinley, an assistant professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences and a member of the Center for Climatic Research in the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies.

The analysis differs from previous studies in its scope across both time and space. One of the biggest challenges in asking how climate is affecting the ocean is simply a lack of data, McKinley says, with available information clustered along shipping lanes and other areas where scientists can take advantage of existing boat traffic. With a dearth of other sampling sites, many studies have simply extrapolated trends from limited areas to broader swaths of the ocean.

McKinley and colleagues at UW-Madison, the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University, and the Universite Pierre et Marie Curie in Paris expanded their analysis by combining existing data from a range of years (1981-2009), methodologies, and locations spanning most of the North Atlantic into a single time series for each of three large regions called gyres, defined by distinct physical and biological characteristics.

They found a high degree of natural variability that often masked longer-term patterns of change and could explain why previous conclusions have disagreed. They discovered that apparent trends in ocean carbon uptake are highly dependent on exactly when and where you look - on the 10- to 15-year time scale, even overlapping time intervals sometimes suggested opposite effects.

"Because the ocean is so variable, we need at least 25 years' worth of data to really see the effect of carbon accumulation in the atmosphere," she says. "This is a big issue in many branches of climate science - what is natural variability, and what is climate change?"

Working with nearly three decades of data, the researchers were able to cut through the variability and identify underlying trends in the surface CO2 throughout the North Atlantic.

During the past three decades, increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide have largely been matched by corresponding increases in dissolved carbon dioxide in the seawater. The gases equilibrate across the air-water interface, influenced by how much carbon is in the atmosphere and the ocean and how much carbon dioxide the water is able to hold as determined by its water chemistry.

But the researchers found that rising temperatures are slowing the carbon absorption across a large portion of the subtropical North Atlantic. Warmer water cannot hold as much carbon dioxide, so the ocean's carbon capacity is decreasing as it warms.

In watching for effects of increasing atmospheric carbon on the ocean's uptake, many people have looked for indications that the carbon content of the ocean is rising faster than that of the atmosphere, McKinley says. However, their new results show that the ocean sink could be weakening even without that visible sign.

"More likely what we're going to see is that the ocean will keep its equilibration but it doesn't have to take up as much carbon to do it because it's getting warmer at the same time," she says. "We are already seeing this in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre, and this is some of the first evidence for climate damping the ocean's ability to take up carbon from the atmosphere."

She stresses the need to improve available datasets and expand this type of analysis to other oceans, which are relatively less-studied than the North Atlantic, to continue to refine carbon uptake trends in different ocean regions. This information will be critical for decision-making, since any decrease in ocean uptake may require greater human efforts to control carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere.




Related Links
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



WATER WORLD
Natural iron fertilisation influences deep-sea ecosystems off the Crozet Islands
Southhampton UK (SPX) Jul 15, 2011
Geo-engineering schemes aimed at tackling global warming through artificial iron fertilisation of the oceans would significantly affect deep-sea ecosystems, according to research involving scientists from the United Kingdom's National Oceanography Centre (NOC) as well as former Ocean and Earth Science research students of the University of Southampton, which is based at the Centre. Most sc ... read more


WATER WORLD
Texas cattle ranchers feel burn of record drought

More radioactive beef found in Japan

World Population Day: Agriculture Offers Huge Opportunities for a Planet of 7 Billion

New Genetic Map of Potato May Lead to Improved Crops

WATER WORLD
Expert help from a distance

Soft Memory Device Opens Door To New Biocompatible Electronics

NIST prototype optics table on a chip places microwave photon in 2 colors at once

Light propagation controlled in photonic chips marks major breakthrough in telecommunications field

WATER WORLD
Aerospace plant opened in Romania

DLR examines the benefits of sectorless airspace

Boeing Values India Market for 1320 New Airplanes at 150 Billion Dollars

DLR Airbus A320 ATRA taxis using fuel cell-powered nose wheel for the first time

WATER WORLD
ICT and automotive: New app reduces motorway pile-ups by 40 percent

Toyota to merge units in face of strong yen

Belgium's highways shine into space - but for how long?

China's auto sales growth 'to slow sharply' in 2011

WATER WORLD
Luxury brands in Taiwan gear up for China tourists

Chinese store under fire over 'fake' imports

China scores broad win in WTO fastener appeal against EU

Iran and China ink agreements totaling $4 billion

WATER WORLD
Forests soak up third of fossil fuel emissions: study

Lack of meaningful land rights threaten Indonesian forests

Forest trees remember their roots

Tribes welcome Indonesia's pledge to forest people

WATER WORLD
Underwater Antarctic Volcanoes

Lockheed Martin and Esri Sign Partnership Towards On-Demand Geospatial Apps and Services

Astrium to build Sentinel-4 atmospheric sensors

Dr VS Hegde Appointed as Chairman and Managing Director of Antrix Corporation Limited

WATER WORLD
The wonders of graphene on display

City dwellers produce as much CO2 as countryside people do

Graphene may gain an 'on-off switch,' adding semiconductor to long list of achievements

Building 2D graphene metamaterials and 1-atom-thick optical devices


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement