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Transcript
Sho Nakamoto’s contribution to
Bio - Climate
Feedback
Workshop held
at Scripps Institution of Oceanography ,La Jolla, April 18-20, 2001.
1. Introduction
In the ocean mixed layer, phytoplanktons convert carbon dioxide into organic
matter, which is accumulated into the body of phytoplankton, zooplankton, and fish
communities. At the end of ocean biological food web, these organic compounds sink
downward into deep ocean and converted into carbon dioxide, emitting heat that
was originally stored in the body of phytoplanktons as a product of photosynthesis.
Here,we explored a possible feedback mechanism between between biological
activities and physical processes of ocean circulation, for the maintenance of steady
and spontaneous ocean geo-chemical system that supports steady carbon
circulation in geological time scale in the world ocean, using Mixed layer-Isopycnal
ocean General Circulation model with remotely sensed Coastal Zone Color Scanner
(CZCS) chlorophyll pigment content data.
2. Why include biological effects in ocean model ?
Relative importance of inorganic carbon dioxide in the geological past is difficult to
assess, but may have been more significant before the evolution of shelly organisms
about 570 million years ago (Andrews et al.,1996; Romankevich,1999; Treguer and
Pondaven, 2000). Most of the 80-100 ppm carbon dioxide change across the last
glacial/interglacial transition may be explained by processes both involving
acid-base equilibrium and biological processes. From ocean drilling cores, it is
suggested that the enhanced deposition of organic matter to the deep ocean may
have
efficiently cooled the greenhouse climate by the rapid removal of excess
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere about 55 Myr ago( Baines et al., 2000; Scmiz,
2000).
During photosynthesis in green plants, light energy is used to convert carbon
dioxide and water into oxygen and organic compounds (Voet et al., 1999). Recent
insitu-observations in the north Pacific demonstrated that the living phytoplankton
absorbed three times more energy than the dead phytoplankton (Sasaki et al.,
2001). This indicates strong energy exchange due to bio-physical interaction in that
part pf the ocean.. In the visible domain the absorbed radiation is essentially
converted into heat, even if energy storage occurs within the organic compounds
created through photosynthesis (Parsons et al., 1973). Penetrated solar radiation
into deep ocean is converted to internal energy to distributed at depth and thus
contributes slowly to the heating of the ocean.
In the application of carbon circulation in the ocean, the amount of visible energy
that was absorbed by phytoplankton is coined as PUR (Photosynthetically Usable
Radiation). PUR is expressed by PAR( Photosyntheticaly available Radiation) as
follows (Morel, 1978; Kishino et al., 1986);
PUR = PAR x (mean absorption coefficient per unit chlorophyll pigment)
Since the mean absorption coefficient per unit chlorophyll pigment is measurable
in the ocean, and since PAR is also measurable. Morel (1988) showed that the
amount of solar energy converted into and stored as chemical energy, in the form of
organic matter, coined as photosynthetically store radiation (PSR), hardly exceeds
more than 2% of the visible incident energy (PAR). This means that most of PUR is
ejected into auxiliary system (turbulent mixed layer), which may alter the physical
and chemical environment through thermodynamics in the turbulent mixed layer.
Thus, solar radiation absorption by living phytoplankton and local heating due to
biological process of the living phytoplankton within the upper ocean may strongly
influence the upper ocean thermodynamics in a time scale that ocean biological
system has been sustained at least for the geological past.
Morel and Antoine (1994) proposed a simple parameterization (hereafter denoted
as MA94), accounting for this biological heating, that allows the vertical profile of
heating rate to be prescribed from the phytoplankton pigment concentration, as it
an be remotely detected from space, by using ocean color sensors.
Their parameterization, MA94, is developed for oceanic case I water, allowing the
vertical profile of the solar radiation absorption and heating rate. . The amount of
absorbed energy at any depth can be computed for any oceanic water provided that
chlorophyll pigment content in the upper layer is known. Figure 1 displays the
transmission of the visible energy, which is the ratio of visible energy at the depth
Z and that at the depth just beneath the ocean surface.
The heating rate
associated with solar infra-red radiation is rapidly absorbed within a few tens of
centimeters, with the influence of solar zenith angle. It is noted that the change of
the solar zenith angle has negligible impact on downward transmission of solar
energy compared with that of chlorophyll pigment concentration.
With typical chlorophyll pigment concentration neat the equatorial Pacific
upwelling region (0.2mg/m3), the equivalent e-folding depth scale, which is the
depth at which the incoming visible energy decrease at 1/e (about 30%) times of the
surface energy, is approximately 5m from the ocean surface. It is expected that the
chlorophyll pigments in the phytoplankton body catch visible photon energy in
their chloroplast and involve photosynthesis at that depth. This leads to
bio-physical interaction through biological heating at this depth (around 5 m) in
upper ocean.
This also suggests that the biological heating near the depth of
around 5m may change upper ocean mixed layer dynamics significantly (because
most of ocean GCM without biological heating employ solar radiation penetration
down to 17m ( or 23m ) globally, based on Paulson and Shimpson (1977)). We
believe that the CZCS derived chlorophyll pigment content in the Equatorial
Pacific leads shifting of biological heat towards surface because the equivalent
e-folding depths (which is the depth where the total energy becomes 1/e (about
30%) of the energy at ocean surface) is about 5m (Figure 1), according to Morel and
Antoine’s heating rate formulae (Morel and Antoine, 1994).
3. Numerical experiments
Nakamoto et al.,(2000) and Nakamoto et al.,(2001) conducted numerical
experiments
to
examine
the
effect
of
MA94
parameterization
in
a
three-dimensional ocean general circulation model. They incorporated remotely
sensed Coastal Zone Color Scanner (CZCS) chlorophyll pigment concentration data
(Figure 2) and atmospheric data from the European Center for Medium-range
Weather Forecast (ECMWF) into an updated version of the OPYC primitive
equation ocean general circulation model (designated hereafter as OPYC).
(Oberhuber, 1993). The model domain was set in global ocean geometry. The model
resolution is approximately 1 degree horizontally with thirteen layers vertically,
based on NOAA 5 minutes resolution data. The top layer of the model represents
the turbulent mixed layer through which atmospheric processes directly force the
model. Solar radiation is allowed to penetrate downwards through the ocean
surface and is absorbed below the surface in the ultra-violet and visible wave
lengths with a constant penetration depth of 23m (Paulson and Simpson, 1977),
hereafter referred to as clear-water parameterization PS77. This parameterization
depth corresponds to the clearest ocean waters (Baker and Frouin, 1987).
In order to examine the effect of varying chlorophyll content in the ocean mixed
layer, they replaced the above clear-water parameterization PS77 with the
alternative parameterization, MA94, accounting for a heating rate within the
upper ocean influenced by chlorophyll pigments. The control run with clear water
parameterization, PS77, of OPYC was carried out for 50 years, which is sufficient
to obtain a cyclo-stationary state for the upper ocean, the thirmocline.
last snapshot of the
50th
Using the
year control-run as initial condition, chlorophyll forcing
parameterization MA94 experiment was conducted for additional 10 years until
another cyclo-stationary state for global ocean SST was obtained. The difference
between the experiments using parameterization PS77 and MA94 delineates the
bulk nature of the effect of varying chlorophyll pigments on downward radiation
transfer processes in the upper ocean, because atmospheric forcing in both model
runs were the same.
They analyze their model data in the Arabian Sea and compared with available
ocean observations to examine the effect of photosynthesis by living phytoplankton.
The Arabian Sea represents typical one-dimensional mixed layer dynamics because
of the homogeneity of horizontal sea temperature in the area (Prasanna-Kumar
and Prasad, 1999; Fischer, 2000). They also analyzed the model data in the
Equatorial Pacific, where horizontal advection plays an important role in
determining the ocean thermal fields.
In the Arabian Sea, ocean model results showed reduction of penetrating solar
radiation across the mixed layer base due to consumption of solar radiation by
phytoplanktons in the mixed layer. The mixed layer thickness decreased by 20 m in
the model experiment because of the increased mixed layer temperature due to the
existence of chlorophyll in the layer during the fall inter-monsoon period. Field
experiments during the Indian Joint Global Ocean Flux Study (JGOFS) in the
Arabian Sea revealed a similar behavior: that is, increasing SST (in excess of 30C)
and decreasing mixed layer depth (about 30m) from April to May (Prasanna-Kumar
and Prasad, 1996). When chlorophyll pigments peaked in October, the upper ocean
warmed and the subsurface cooled through the effect of vertical shift of soar
heating toward the surface. Figure 3 displays the difference of vertical section of
the temperature ( which is the depth-latitude plot of temperature from Chlorophyll
driven ocean model MA94 minus that from non-chlorophyll ocean model PS77)
along the latitude of 20N in October. It is noted that the mixed layer temperature
rises more than 0.5 K at about 50m near 69E, while subsurface temperature
decreases by 0.5 K.
The equatorial Pacific, where permanent existence of phytoplankton along the
equatorial upwelling region (Figure 2), is an excellent example of the bio-physical
interaction. Because of smaller seasonal excursion of relatively shallower mixed
layer in the equatorial ocean, the effect of biological heating is more dynamically
pronounced in the equatorial region. As was the case in the Arabian Sea, the mixed
layer base along the equator was raised and the north-south slope of the mixed
layer base shoaled towards the equator. This generates anomalous westward
geostrophic currents north and south of the equator. In the western equatorial,
these anomalous geostrophic currents merge into and strengthen the equatorial
undercurrents (EUC), supplying water mass from the 200m depth in the west to
the eastern surface equatorial Pacific (Figure 4). This phytoplankton-induced
undercurrent (EUC) enhances upwelling around 110W, resulting in a lower SST
anomalies (Nakamoto et al., 2001).
4. Summary
Thus, we feel that in the open ocean, where horizontal advection is essential, there
may be a possible interaction between the biological heating and rotating fluid in
the earth system: our model experiment indicates that chlorophyll pigments in the
equatorial Pacific lifts the base of the mixed layer because of the shift of the
biological heating toward the ocean surface due to the existence of phytoplankton
in the equatorial upwelling region. This results in shoaling of the mixed layer base
towards the equator, inducing the westward geostrophic currents that merge into
the equatorial undercurrent in the western equatorial Pacific. This implies further
implication of carbon circulation in the equatorial Pacific ocean. The induced
westward geostrophic currents in both side of the equator merged into EUC in the
western equatorial Pacific region. From the recent deep water (3000m) sediment
trapping experiments conducted in the western equatorial Pacific indicated the
sinking phytoplankton debris whose living communities are known to be located at
mid depth (around 200m) in the south eastern tropical Pacific around 10S, 100W
(Personal communication from Professor Motoyoshi Oda of Tohoku University,
2000). Such sediment trapping experiment data may be useful for further
comparison with numerical model results as verification of biologically induced
geostrophic currents in the equatorial Pacific ocean.
From numerical model experiments, it is proposed that chlorophyll pigment
content in the upper ocean modifies the upper ocean heat energy accumulation by
changing the ocean radiation transfer processes vertically. It is also shown that the
space-time variation of phytoplankton activity in the upper ocean leads to
inhomogeniety of radiation transfer in the turbulent mixed layer: in the equatorial
Pacific, where relatively shallow thickness and small seasonal excursion of the
turbulent mixed layer is vulnerable to the heating through photosynthesis of
phytoplankton.
Thus, we feel that the phytoplankton in the equatorial Pacific
ocean may induce additional upwelling due to modification of the mixed layer
depth in the equatorial wave guide region, which favors the transport of cold,
nutrients-rich water mass from the 200m depth in the western equatorial Pacific.
This may play a role of positive feedback for phytoplankton nutrients supply in the
eastern equatorial Pacific ocean.
References,
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Introduction to Environmental Chemistry, Blackwell Science Ltd., Oxford, 1996.
Baker, K.S. and R. Frouin, Relation between photosynthetically active available
radiation and total insolation at the ocean surface under clear skies., Limnol.
Oceanogr. 32, 1370-1377, 1987.
Fischer, A.S., The Upper Ocean Response to the Monsoon in the Arabian Sea,
PhD. Thesis, MIT,/Woods Hole, 2000.
Kishino, M., N. Okami, M. Takahashi, and S. Ichimura, Light utilization efficiency
and quantum yield of phytoplankton in the thermally stratified sea. Limnnol.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Figure 1. The transmission of solar energy, which is the ratio of solar energy at the
depth Z and that at the depth just beneath the ocean surface, assuming vertically
uniform chlorophyll pigment content based on Morel and Antoine (1994). With
typical chlorophyll pigment concentration neat the equatorial Pacific upwelling
region (0.2mg/m3), the equivalent e-folding depth scale, which is the depth at
which the incoming energy decrease at 1/e (about 30%) times of the surface energy,
is approximately 5m from the ocean surface.
Figure 2. Remotely sensed chlorophyll pigment concentration derived from Coastal
Zone Color Scanner (CZCS) satellite data.
Figure 3. The difference of vertical section of the temperature ( which is the
depth-latitude plot of temperature from Chlorophyll driven ocean model MA94
minus that from non-chlorophyll ocean model PS77) along the latitude of 30N in
October. It is noted that the mixed layer temperature rises more than 0.5 K at
about 50m near 69E, while subsurface temperature becomes lower by 0.5 K.
Figure 4. The anomalous westward geostrophic currents north and south of the
equator. In the western equatorial, these anomalous geostrophic currents merge
into and strengthen the equatorial undercurrents (EUC), supplying water mass
from the 200m depth in the west to the eastern surface equatorial Pacific ocean.