Transient tracer distributions in the Fram Strait in 2012 and inferred anthropogenic carbon content and transport

The storage of anthropogenic carbon in the ocean's interior is an important process which modulates the increasing carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere. The polar regions are expected to be net sinks for anthropogenic carbon. Transport estimates of dissolved inorganic carbon and the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: T. Stöven, T. Tanhua, M. Hoppema, W.-J. von Appen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2016-02-01
Series:Ocean Science
Online Access:http://www.ocean-sci.net/12/319/2016/os-12-319-2016.pdf
Description
Summary:The storage of anthropogenic carbon in the ocean's interior is an important process which modulates the increasing carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere. The polar regions are expected to be net sinks for anthropogenic carbon. Transport estimates of dissolved inorganic carbon and the anthropogenic offset can thus provide information about the magnitude of the corresponding storage processes. <br><br> Here we present a transient tracer, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) data set along 78°50′ N sampled in the Fram Strait in 2012. A theory on tracer relationships is introduced, which allows for an application of the inverse-Gaussian–transit-time distribution (IG-TTD) at high latitudes and the estimation of anthropogenic carbon concentrations. Mean current velocity measurements along the same section from 2002–2010 were used to estimate the net flux of DIC and anthropogenic carbon by the boundary currents above 840 m through the Fram Strait. <br><br> The new theory explains the differences between the theoretical (IG-TTD-based) tracer age relationship and the specific tracer age relationship of the field data, by saturation effects during water mass formation and/or the deliberate release experiment of SF<sub>6</sub> in the Greenland Sea in 1996, rather than by different mixing or ventilation processes. Based on this assumption, a maximum SF<sub>6</sub> excess of 0.5–0.8 fmol kg<sup>−1</sup> was determined in the Fram Strait at intermediate depths (500–1600 m). The anthropogenic carbon concentrations are 50–55 µmol kg<sup>−1</sup> in the Atlantic Water/Recirculating Atlantic Water, 40–45 µmol kg<sup>−1</sup> in the Polar Surface Water/warm Polar Surface Water and between 10 and 35 µmol kg<sup>−1</sup> in the deeper water layers, with lowest concentrations in the bottom layer. The net fluxes through the Fram Strait indicate a net outflow of  ∼  0.4 DIC and  ∼  0.01 PgC yr<sup>−1</sup> anthropogenic carbon from the Arctic Ocean into the North Atlantic, albeit with high uncertainties.
ISSN:1812-0784
1812-0792