Global database of ratios of particulate organic carbon to thorium-234 in the ocean: improving estimates of the biological carbon pump
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Published:2020-06-09
Issue:2
Volume:12
Page:1267-1285
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ISSN:1866-3516
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Container-title:Earth System Science Data
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Sci. Data
Author:
Puigcorbé VienaORCID, Masqué PereORCID, Le Moigne Frédéric A. C.
Abstract
Abstract. The ocean's biological carbon pump (BCP) plays a major role in the global
carbon cycle. A fraction of the photosynthetically fixed organic carbon
produced in surface waters is exported below the sunlit layer as settling
particles (e.g., marine snow). Since the seminal works on the BCP, global
estimates of the global strength of the BCP have improved but large
uncertainties remain (from 5 to 20 Gt C yr−1 exported below the
euphotic zone or mixed-layer depth). The 234Th technique is widely used
to measure the downward export of particulate organic carbon (POC). This
technique has the advantage of allowing a downward flux to be determined by
integrating the deficit of 234Th in the upper water column and coupling
it to the POC∕234Th ratio in sinking particles. However, the factors
controlling the regional, temporal, and depth variations of POC∕234Th
ratios are poorly understood. We present a database of 9318 measurements of
the POC∕234Th ratio in the ocean, from the surface down to >5500 m, sampled on three size fractions (∼>0.7 µm, ∼1–50 µm, ∼>50 µm), collected with in situ pumps and bottles, and also from bulk particles
collected with sediment traps. The dataset is archived in the data
repository PANGAEA® under
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.911424 (Puigcorbé, 2019). The samples
presented in this dataset were collected between 1989 and 2018, and the data
have been obtained from published papers and open datasets available online.
Unpublished data have also been included. Multiple measurements can be found
in most of the open ocean provinces. However, there is an uneven
distribution of the data, with some areas highly sampled (e.g., China Sea,
Bermuda Atlantic Time Series station) compared to some others that are not
well represented, such as the southeastern Atlantic, the south Pacific, and
the south Indian oceans. Some coastal areas, although in a much smaller
number, are also included in this global compilation. Globally, based on
different depth horizons and climate zones, the median POC∕234Th
ratios have a wide range, from 0.6 to 18 µmol dpm−1.
Funder
Edith Cowan University
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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