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Sources and sinks of CO2 in the west coast of Bay of Bengal

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Sources and sinks of CO2 in the west coast of Bay of Bengal
 
Creator Sarma, V.V.S.S.
Krishna, M.S.
Rao, V.D.
Viswanadham, R.
Kumar, N.A.
Kumari, T.R.
Gawade, L.
Ghatkar, S.
Tari, A.
 
Subject atmospheric gases
atmospheric particulates
river discharge
sinking
 
Description Observations at high spatial resolution (100 x 50 km sup(2)) in the western continental shelf of Bay of Bengal during southwest monsoon, when peak discharge occurs into the Bay through major rivers of the Indian subcontinent, revealed that freshwater discharge exerts dominant control on the inorganic carbon components in surface waters. Lower than present atmospheric pCO sub(2) levels were found in the northwestern (NW) than southwestern (SW) coastal Bay of Bengal. The pCO sub(2) levels in the peninsular rivers were an order of magnitude higher (5000-17000 mu atm) than that of atmospheric levels and glacial river Ganges (approx 500 mu atm). The discharge from the peninsular rivers has a stronger influence in the SW region, whereas the Ganges river discharge has a stronger influences in the NW region. Source or sink of CO sub(2) in the shelf region depends on the discharged river characteristics and the East India Coastal Current that distributes discharged water along the coast. Although during northeast monsoon, the situation is briefly reversed and the region acts as a sink, and on annual scale, the western Bay of Bengal acts as a source for atmospheric CO sub(2) than hitherto hypothesised.
 
Date 2012-02-22T04:45:37Z
2012-02-22T04:45:37Z
2012
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Tellus (B: Chem. Phys. Meteorol.), vol.64; 2012; 10pp, 10961; DOI: 10.3402/tellusb.v64i0.10961
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4016
 
Language en
 
Rights Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License
 
Publisher International Meteorological Institute in Stockholm