Affiliation:
1. Geophysical Institute University of Bergen Bergen Norway
2. Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research Bergen Norway
3. NORCE Norwegian Research Centre Bergen Norway
4. National Oceanography Centre Southampton UK
5. Department of Physical Oceanography Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole MA USA
Abstract
AbstractRecent work suggests that Oxygen Minimum Zones (OMZs) are sustained by the supply of oxygen‐poor waters rather than the export of organic matter from the local surface layer and its subsequent remineralization inside OMZs. However, the mechanisms that form and maintain OMZs are not well constrained, such as the origin of the oxygen that oxygenates OMZs, and the locations where oxygen consumption occurs. Here we use an observation‐based transport matrix to determine the origins of open ocean OMZs in terms of (a) OMZ volume, (b) oxygen that survives remineralization and oxygenates OMZs, and (c) oxygen utilization in the interior ocean that contributes to the oxygen‐deficit of OMZs. We also determine where the utilization of oxygen occurs along the pathways that ventilate the OMZs. Our results show that about half of the volume of OMZ waters originate in high‐latitude regions, but most of their oxygen is utilized for remineralization before they reach OMZs. Instead, OMZs are mostly oxygenated by tropical, subtropical and intermediate waters formed in nearby regions. More than half of the utilization of oxygen occurs in the tropics and subtropics, while less than a third occurs within the OMZs themselves. We therefore suggest that, in steady‐state, OMZs are primarily set by ocean circulation pathways that high‐latitude deep and old water upwards, with relatively low oxygen content.
Funder
Division of Grants and Agreements
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Cited by
3 articles.
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