4.6 Review Book Chapter

Changes in Ocean Heat, Carbon Content, and Ventilation: A Review of the First Decade of GO-SHIP Global Repeat Hydrography

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF MARINE SCIENCE, VOL 8
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages 185-215

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-marine-052915-100829

Keywords

anthropogenic climate change; ocean temperature change; salinity change; ocean carbon cycle; ocean oxygen and nutrients; ocean chlorofluorocarbons; ocean circulation change; ocean mixing

Funding

  1. NERC [NE/K004387/1, NE/K00249X/1, NE/M005046/1, NE/N018095/1, NE/K002473/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  2. Directorate For Geosciences [1437015] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  3. Division Of Ocean Sciences [1059886, 1434000] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  4. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/N018095/1, NE/K002473/1, noc010012, NE/M005046/1, NE/K00249X/1, NE/K004387/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Global ship-based programs, with highly accurate, full water column physical and biogeochemical observations repeated decadally since the 1970s, provide a crucial resource for documenting ocean change. The ocean, a central component of Earth's climate system, is taking up most of Earth's excess anthropogenic heat, with about 19% of this excess in the abyssal ocean beneath 2,000 m, dominated by Southern Ocean warming. The ocean also has taken up about 27% of anthropogenic carbon, resulting in acidification of the upper ocean. Increased stratification has resulted in a decline in oxygen and increase in nutrients in the Northern Hemisphere thermocline and an expansion of tropical oxygen minimum zones. Southern Hemisphere thermocline oxygen increased in the 2000s owing to stronger wind forcing and ventilation. The most recent decade of global hydrography has mapped dissolved organic carbon, a large, bioactive reservoir, for the first time and quantified its contribution to export production (similar to 20%) and deep-ocean oxygen utilization. Ship-based measurements also show that vertical diffusivity increases from a minimum in the thermocline to a maximum within the bottom 1,500 m, shifting our physical paradigm of the ocean's overturning circulation.

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