Sensitivity of the Global Ocean Carbon Sink to the Ocean Skin in a Climate Model

Author:

Bellenger Hugo1ORCID,Bopp Laurent1,Ethé Christian2,Ho David3ORCID,Duvel Jean Philippe1,Flavoni Simona4,Guez Lionel1,Kataoka Takahito5ORCID,Perrot Xavier1ORCID,Parc Laetitia1,Watanabe Michio5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. LMD/IPSL ENS Université PSL École Polytechnique Institut Polytechnique de Paris Sorbonne Université CNRS Paris France

2. Institut Pierre Simon Laplace CNRS Paris France

3. Department of Oceanography University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Honolulu HI USA

4. LIttoral ENvironnement et Sociétés La Rochelle France

5. Japan Agency for Marine‐Earth Science and Technology Yokohama Japan

Abstract

AbstractThe ocean skin is composed of thin interfacial microlayers of temperature and mass of less than 1 mm where heat and chemical exchanges are controlled by molecular diffusion. It is characterized by a cooling of ∼−0.2 K and an increase in salinity of ∼0.1 g/kg (absolute salinity) relative to the water below. A surface observation‐based air‐sea CO2 flux estimate considering the variation of the CO2 concentration in these microlayers has been shown to lead to an increase in the global ocean sink of the anthropogenic CO2 by +0.4 PgC yr−1 (15% of the global sink). This study analyzes this effect in more details using a 15‐year (2000–2014) simulation from an Earth System Model (ESM) that incorporates a physical representation of the ocean surface layers (diurnal warm layer and rain lenses) and microlayers. Results show that considering the microlayers increases the simulated global ocean carbon sink by +0.26 to +0.37 PgC yr−1 depending on assumptions on the chemical equilibrium. This is indeed about 15% of the global sink (2.04 PgC yr−1) simulated by the ESM. However, enabling the ocean skin adjustment to feedback on ocean carbon concentrations reduces this increase to only +0.13 (±0.09) PgC y−1. Coupled models underestimate the ocean carbon sink by ∼5% if the ocean skin effect is not included.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Space and Planetary Science,Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics,Oceanography

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