Glacial CO<sub>2</sub> decrease and deep-water deoxygenation by iron fertilization from glaciogenic dust
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Published:2019-06-04
Issue:3
Volume:15
Page:981-996
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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:
Yamamoto AkitomoORCID, Abe-Ouchi AyakoORCID, Ohgaito RumiORCID, Ito AkinoriORCID, Oka Akira
Abstract
Abstract. Increased accumulation of respired carbon in the deep ocean
associated with enhanced efficiency of the biological carbon pump is thought
to be a key mechanism of glacial CO2 drawdown.
Despite greater oxygen solubility due to seawater cooling, recent
quantitative and qualitative proxy data show glacial deep-water
deoxygenation, reflecting increased respired carbon accumulation. However,
the mechanisms of deep-water deoxygenation and contribution from the
biological pump to glacial CO2 drawdown have remained
unclear. In this study, we report the significance of iron fertilization
from glaciogenic dust in glacial CO2 decrease and
deep-water deoxygenation using our numerical simulation, which successfully
reproduces the magnitude and large-scale pattern of the observed oxygen
changes from the present to the Last Glacial Maximum. Sensitivity
experiments show that physical changes contribute to only one-half of all
glacial deep deoxygenation, whereas the other one-half is driven by iron
fertilization and an increase in the whole ocean nutrient inventory. We find
that iron input from glaciogenic dust with higher iron solubility is the
most significant factor in enhancing the biological pump and deep-water
deoxygenation. Glacial deep-water deoxygenation expands the hypoxic waters
in the deep Pacific and Indian oceans. The simulated global volume of
hypoxic waters is nearly double the present value, suggesting that glacial
deep water was a more severe environment for benthic animals than that of
the modern oceans. Our model underestimates the deoxygenation in the deep
Southern Ocean because of enhanced ventilation. The model–proxy comparison
of oxygen change suggests that a stratified Southern Ocean is required for
reproducing the oxygen decrease in the deep Southern Ocean. Iron
fertilization and a global nutrient increase contribute to a decrease in
glacial CO2 of more than 30 ppm, which is supported
by the model–proxy agreement of oxygen change. Our findings confirm the
significance of the biological pump in glacial CO2
drawdown and deoxygenation.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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