Author:
Niemeyer Daniela,Kriest Iris,Oschlies Andreas
Abstract
Abstract. Particle aggregation determines the particle flux length
scale and affects the marine oxygen concentration and thus the volume of
oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) that are of special relevance for ocean nutrient
cycles and marine ecosystems and that have been found to expand faster than
can be explained by current state-of-the-art models. To investigate the
impact of particle aggregation on global model performance, we carried out a
sensitivity study with different parameterisations of marine aggregates and
two different model resolutions. Model performance was investigated with
respect to global nutrient and oxygen concentrations, as well as extent and
location of OMZs. Results show that including an aggregation model improves
the representation of OMZs. Moreover, we found that besides a fine spatial
resolution of the model grid, the consideration of porous particles, an
intermediate-to-high particle sinking speed and a moderate-to-high
stickiness improve the model fit to both global distributions of dissolved
inorganic tracers and regional patterns of OMZs, compared to a model without
aggregation. Our model results therefore suggest that improvements not only
in the model physics but also in the description of particle aggregation
processes can play a substantial role in improving the representation of
dissolved inorganic tracers and OMZs on a global scale. However, dissolved
inorganic tracers are apparently not sufficient for a global model
calibration, which could necessitate global model calibration against a
global observational dataset of marine organic particles.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
15 articles.
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