Evaluating the biological pump efficiency of the Last Glacial Maximum ocean using <i>δ</i><sup>13</sup>C
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Published:2021-04-06
Issue:2
Volume:17
Page:753-774
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ISSN:1814-9332
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Container-title:Climate of the Past
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Morée Anne L., Schwinger JörgORCID, Ninnemann Ulysses S.ORCID, Jeltsch-Thömmes AurichORCID, Bethke IngoORCID, Heinze ChristophORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Although both physical and biological marine changes are
required to explain the 100 ppm lower atmospheric pCO2 of the Last
Glacial Maximum (LGM, ∼21 ka) as compared to preindustrial
(PI) times, their exact contributions are debated. Proxies of past marine
carbon cycling (such as δ13C) document these changes and thus
provide constraints for quantifying the drivers of long-term carbon cycle
variability. This modeling study discusses the physical and biological
changes in the ocean needed to simulate an LGM ocean in satisfactory
agreement with proxy data, here focusing especially on δ13C. We
prepared a PI and LGM equilibrium simulation using the ocean model NorESM-OC with full biogeochemistry (including the carbon isotopes δ13C and radiocarbon) and dynamic sea ice. The modeled LGM–PI differences are evaluated against a wide range of physical and biogeochemical proxy data and show agreement for key aspects of the physical ocean state within the data uncertainties. However, the lack of a simulated increase of regenerated nutrients for the LGM indicates that additional biogeochemical changes are
required to simulate an LGM ocean in agreement with proxy data. In order to
examine these changes, we explore the potential effects of different global
mean biological pump efficiencies on the simulated marine biogeochemical
tracer distributions. Through estimating which biological pump efficiency
reduces LGM model–proxy biases the most, we estimate that the global mean
biological pump efficiency increased from 38 % (PI) to up to 75 %
(LGM). The drivers of such an increase in the biological pump efficiency may be both biological and related to circulation changes that are
incompletely captured by our model – such as stronger isolation of Southern Source Water. Finally, even after considering a 75 % biological pump efficiency in the LGM ocean, a remaining model–proxy error in δ13C exists that is 0.07 ‰ larger than the 0.19 ‰ data uncertainty. This error indicates that additional
changes in ocean dynamics are needed to simulate an LGM ocean in agreement
with proxy data.
Funder
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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