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Impact of historical climate change on the Southern Ocean carbon cycle and implications for future change Richard Matear, and Andrew Lenton Jan 2009 Wealth from Oceans Flagship and CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research Law et al 2008; Matear & Lenton 2008; McNeil & Matear 2008 Key Question: How will the Southern Ocean Carbon Cycle respond to global warming? Background Importance of the Southern Ocean to the global carbon cycle Review a recent studies of the response of the Southern Ocean carbon cycle to historical climate change Simulations of how historical climate change influences Southern Ocean carbon cycle Summarize modeling approach and the NCEP re-analysis forcing fields used to drive the ocean carbon model Review how climate variability in heat and freshwater fluxes and wind stress alter the SO carbon uptake (both the natural carbon and anthropogenic CO2 uptake) Discuss how to detect the changes in the Southern Ocean carbon cycle Southern Annular Mode (SAM) Lenton & Matear 2007 SAM calculated from NCEP-R1 850hPa geopotential height anomaly A Positive SAM has stronger westerly winds Robust feature of climate change projections (Fyfe 2007) Southern Ocean overturning circulation Saturation of Southern Ocean carbon uptake (LeQuere et al 2007) Rising CO2 in the atmosphere should drive an increased oceanic uptake of CO2 (red line) Ocean uptake with climate variability (blue line) Increasing oceanic uptake Control: Natural Enhanced Eddy: Natural Anthropogenic Anthropogenic Zickfield etal 2007 Ocean General Circulation Model with biogeochemical cycles •Ocean model simulations based on the ocean component of the Mk3.5 CSIRO climate model •Approximately 1 x 2 degree north-south and eastwest resolution •Light, mixed layer depth and phosphate formulation for export production of carbon and constant rain ratio for calcium carbon export (8%) •Simulations started from climatological T, S, DIC, Alkalinity and phosphate fields in year 1850 •Simulation run till 1948 after which the forcing fields are allowed to vary •Period of the 1940s used to diagnose the seasonal freshwater flux into the ocean to account for potential systematic errors in the NCEP freshwater fluxes Model Experiments Experiment Forcing Heat Flux Freshwater Flux Winds Total Variable Variable Variable 1948 1948 1948 1948 Hflx Variable 1948 1948 Fflx 1948 Variable 1948 Tau 1948 1948 Variable Table . The daily forcing fields used to drive the model from year 1948 to 2002 for the various experiments. Variable forcing refers to the use of forcing fields from years 1948 to 2002 while 1948 denotes the use of forcing fields from only year 1948. For cases where the winds are allowed to vary (Total and Tau) the interannually varying wind speeds are used in the calculation of the gas exchange coefficient for the air-sea CO2 fluxes otherwise the 1948 year winds are used. NCEP Atmospheric Forcing Changes HF FW • SO is south of 40°S • Increased heat and freshwater fluxes into the SO • Increased zonal windstress Taux Tauy Zonal averaged windstress Taux max Latitude of Taux max Stronger westerly winds which migrate south Comparison between natural and anthropogenic carbon uptake Natural carbon Natural carbon uptake dominates the climate variability response Anthropogenic carbon Opposite response of natural and anthropogenic carbon uptake Total 1948 Tau Hflx Fflx Correlation with the Annual mean South Ocean CO2 Fluxes Experiment Changes in SO anthropogenic carbon fluxes versus natural carbon fluxes Correlation Regression -0.52 -0.10 Hflx -0.81 -0.12 Fflx -0.96 -0.22 Tau -0.91 -0.26 Total 1948 The correlation coefficient and regression value of the changes in the annual mean SO anthropogenic carbon uptake versus the change in the annual mean SO natural carbon fluxes. The changes in the carbon fluxes are determined by subtracting the fluxes from the 1948 experiment. The regression value gives the change in the anthropogenic carbon fluxes per unit change in the natural carbon fluxes. Changes in export production Southern Ocean averaged export production Little simulated variability in export production (< 10%) Total 1948 Tau Hflx Fflx Affect of wind changes on export production for year 2002 - 1948 (total exp.) Ventilation of the Southern Ocean Annual averaged surface density Ocean ventilation based on the outcrop area of water denser than 27.1 (AAIW or denser) Total 1948 Tau Hflx Fflx Winds and freshwater fluxes have the largest impact on the ventilation of the Southern Ocean Relationship between carbon uptake and ventilation Natural carbon FW HF Winds Total High correlation with ocean ventilation variability Experiment Anthropogenic carbon Ventilation Anomaly Correlation with ocean ventilation Natural Anthropogeni Total -0.8165 0.1050 1948 - - Hflx -0.8888 0.8507 Fflx -0.9612 0.9542 Tau -0.9617 0.9045 Summary High negative correlation between SO changes in natural and anthropogenic carbon uptake For recent past and for next several decades the natural response will dominate the SO response In the Southern Ocean, the response to the different forcing fields is complex Model response is dominated by changes in ocean ventilation Not clear that the SO carbon uptake is declining Southern Ocean simulated reduction in oceanic uptake of carbon is sensitive to the forcing fields used in the ocean simulation (particularly the freshwater flux). Using sea surface salinity restoring would give results consistent with LeQuere etal 2007 LeQuere et al 2007 conclusion that the SO uptake is declining is premature Detecting Change Law et al 2008; Matear & Lenton 2008; McNeil & Matear 2008 Saturation of Southern Ocean carbon uptake (LeQuere et al 2007) Rising CO2 in the atmosphere should drive an increased oceanic uptake of CO2 (red line) Ocean uptake with climate variability (blue line) Increasing oceanic uptake Increased uptake Trend in Southern Ocean Carbon Uptake Southern Oceanic uptake is increasing in contrast to Le Quere et al 2007 decline Law et al., Science 2008 What can the surface pCO2 measurements tell us about the Southern Ocean Carbon sink? Trend over years 1980 to 2004 pCO2 Trend (ppm/yr): Total and Tau experiments Total Tau Dissolved Oxygen: zonally-averaged Pacific (umol/kg) DO minimum in the upwelled CPDW CPDW is also associated with a Dissolved Inorganic Carbon Maximum Synthetic Inversion of Atmospheric O2 Simulated sea-air oxygen flux (red line) Inversion of simulated atmospheric oxygen data (two different networks) The inversion can reproduce the interannual variability and trend Dissolved oxygen changes in the ocean interior would also occur if there was an increase in the ACC Law and Matear In prep Recent changes in SO stratification Eddy resolving simulations do not produce an increase In Antarctic Circumpolar Current and an increase in upwelling Bonning et al., Nature Geosciences 2008 Simulated ACC Transport Total 1948 Tau Hflx Fflx Summary High negative correlation between SO changes in natural and anthropogenic carbon uptake For recent past and for next several decades the natural carbon cycle response will dominate the SO response to climate variability Southern Ocean carbon response to climate change is not clear because: the response to the different forcing fields is complex Increase in Heat and Freshwater Fluxes into the ocean will counter act the increase in winds How one prescribes the freshwater flux does influence the past variability in SO carbon uptake Not clear how the SO will respond to a more positive SAM: - Greater Ekman transport or energy channeled into increased eddy activity Biogeochemical observations of CO2 and oxygen could be used to detect change and determine how the SO responds to a more positive SAM Thank you! Questions? Thank you, Questions? Law et al 2008; Matear & Lenton 2008; McNeil & Matear 2008 Box Model Representation of the SO 1 FA / FN (pCO2A(t) 280)/(pCO2Deep 280) 2 3 4 pCO2A equals 310 and 370 ppm. deep water pCO2 equals 450 ppm 5 6 7 Ratio of change in anthropogenic to natural carbon flux of -0.17 to -0.55 Metzl and Lenton in prep Metzl and Lenton in prep PF SAZ SAZ AZ Antarctic Zone SAF STF STF Southern Ocean Thermohaline Circulation SAMW AAIW 1000m UCDW 2000m AABW NADW 3000m LCDW Antarctica 4000m 40°S 50°S 60°S 70°S 80°S Modified from Speer et al 2000 CO2 Uptake: Response to SSS restoring