4.5 Article

A framework to evaluate and elucidate the driving mechanisms of coastal sea surface pCO2 seasonality using an ocean general circulation model (MOM6-COBALT)

Journal

OCEAN SCIENCE
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 67-88

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/os-18-67-2022

Keywords

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Funding

  1. BELSPO through the project ReCAP, Belgian research program FedTwin
  2. European Union [776810, 101003536]

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This study improves a method for studying the seasonal changes in pCO(2) in coastal oceans and applies it to three different coastal regions. The results show that the seasonality of pCO(2) in different regions is controlled by the balance between ocean circulation, biological activity, and thermal changes. This study provides a foundation for further understanding the mechanisms of CO2 exchanges in coastal oceans.
The temporal variability of the sea surface partial pressure of CO2 (pCO(2)) and the underlying processes driving this variability are poorly understood in the coastal ocean. In this study, we tailor an existing method that quantifies the effects of thermal changes, biological activity, ocean circulation and freshwater fluxes to examine seasonal pCO(2) changes in highly variable coastal environments. We first use the Modular Ocean Model version 6 (MOM6) and bio-geochemical module Carbon Ocean Biogeochemistry And Lower Trophics version 2 (COBALTv2) at a half-degree resolution to simulate coastal CO2 dynamics and evaluate them against pCO(2) from the Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas database (SOCAT) and from the continuous coastal pCO(2) product generated from SOCAT by a two-step neuronal network interpolation method (coastal Self-Organizing Map Feed-Forward neural Network SOM-FFN, Laruelle et al., 2017). The MOM6-COBALT model reproduces the observed spatiotemporal variability not only in pCO(2) but also in sea surface temperature, salinity and nutrients in most coastal environments, except in a few specific regions such as marginal seas. Based on this evaluation, we identify coastal regions of high and medium agreement between model and coastal SOM-FFN where the drivers of coastal pCO(2) seasonal changes can be examined with reasonable confidence. Second, we apply our decomposition method in three contrasted coastal regions: an eastern (US East Coast) and a western (the Californian Current) boundary current and a polar coastal region (the Norwegian Basin). Results show that differences in pCO(2) seasonality in the three regions are controlled by the balance between ocean circulation and bio-logical and thermal changes. Circulation controls the pCO(2) seasonality in the Californian Current; biological activity controls pCO(2) in the Norwegian Basin; and the interplay between biological processes and thermal and circulation changes is key on the US East Coast. The refined approach presented here allows the attribution of pCO(2) changes with small residual biases in the coastal ocean, allowing for future work on the mechanisms controlling coastal air-sea CO2 exchanges and how they are likely to be affected by future changes in sea surface temperature, hydrodynamics and biological dynamics.

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