Strong pCO2 Undersaturation in an Arctic Sea: A Decade of Spatial and Temporal Variability in Baffin Bay

Author:

Nickoloff G.1ORCID,Else B. G. T.1ORCID,Ahmed M.2ORCID,Burgers T. M.34ORCID,Miller L. A.5ORCID,Papakyriakou T.3

Affiliation:

1. Geography Department University of Calgary Calgary AB Canada

2. Education and Research Group Esri Canada Calgary AB Canada

3. Centre for Earth Observation Science University of Manitoba Winnipeg MB Canada

4. Now at Arctic Aquatic Research Division Freshwater Institute Fisheries and Oceans Canada Winnipeg MB Canada

5. Institute of Ocean Sciences Fisheries and Oceans Canada Sidney BC Canada

Abstract

AbstractUtilizing an 11‐year (2011–2021) data set, we report surface‐ocean pCO2 in Baffin Bay during the open‐water season (June–October) to establish a baseline understanding of surface seawater carbon dynamics in this region. We found pCO2 was strongly undersaturated (70–130 μatm below saturation, depending on year), albeit with substantial regional variability. Though temperature was found to be a generally strong control of pCO2, sea‐ice dynamics and other non‐thermal drivers controlled pCO2 at certain times and in certain regions. The Baffin Island Current region (western Baffin Bay) experienced relatively high pCO2 during instances of high sea‐ice cover, usually in early spring. Average pCO2 was comparatively lower in the West Greenland Current region (eastern Baffin Bay) which is ice‐free substantially longer (by 3–4 months) and where temperature acted as the dominant control to pCO2. With respect to temporal variations, June had the lowest pCO2 of the open‐water season, coinciding with active sea‐ice melt. Surface‐ocean pCO2 then increased month‐to‐month through July and August due to warming and decreased meltwater dilution, increasing again into September before stabilizing into October. Generally, non‐thermal controls acted to decrease pCO2 during mid‐summer (possibly primary production, sea‐ice melt, and circulation), but acted to increase pCO2 during early fall (vertical mixing). Despite spatial and temporal variation over the open‐water season, persistent undersaturation suggests that Baffin Bay is a potentially strong CO2 sink, even in comparison to other uptake regions across the western Arctic.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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