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Oceanic pCO2 in the Indian sector of the southern Ocean during the austral summer-winter transition phase

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Oceanic pCO2 in the Indian sector of the southern Ocean during the austral summer-winter transition phase
 
Creator Shetye, S.
Mohan, R.
Patil, S.
Jena, B.
Chacko, R.
George, J.V.
Noronha, S.
Singh, N.
Priya, L.
Sudhakar, M.
 
Subject AQUATIC COMMUNITIES
AQUATIC ECOLOGY, PRODUCTIVITY
OCEANOGRAPHY AND LIMNOLOGY
CHEMISTRY AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
 
Description Biogeochemical processes in the Southern Ocean (SO) play a significant role in regulating the global climate. The physical and biological processes controlling pCO2 in the surface mixed layer at the Indian sector of SO were observed, and changes during the transition period from summer to early winter (January, February and March) were compared. An existing, one-dimensional model describing the mixed-layer carbon cycle was used to determine the relative contributions of biological activity, mixing, thermal and air–sea fluxes on pCO2. A breakdown of the controls shows that the pCO2 distributions are dominated by biological processes during January and February, whereas mixing and thermal effects contributed equally during March. Biological processes accounting for pCO2 decrease reached a maximum value of 108 µatm during January. Our results are categorized according to distinct hydrographic regions such as oceanic fronts Sub-tropical front (STF), Sub-Antarctic front (SAF), Polar front (PF) and Antarctic zone (AZ). pCO2 varied among these three studied months, the mean pCO2 increasing from 286 µatm in January to 337 µatm in March, whereas an opposite trend was observed with dissolved oxygen (O2). The satellite-derived Primary Production (PP) decreased from January to March and also from the STF towards the SAF, PF and AZ. The observed differences in PP and pCO2 during the three months showed the total diatom count ranging from 0.49×103 cells/l in March to 3.2×103 cells/l in January. Our study indicates that the drawdown in sea-surface pCO2 from March to January could be attributed to the light availability, shallow Mixed layer depth (MLD), high PP, nutrient availability, and low upwelling velocity. Eddies play an important role in regulating pCO2 that require further studies to quantify their percentage contribution in pCO2 rise/drawdown
 
Date 2016-01-07T03:54:36Z
2016-01-07T03:54:36Z
2015
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, vol.118; 2015; 250-260
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4877
 
Language en
 
Rights An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2015] Elsevier
 
Publisher Elsevier