Title: Unresolved Issues
1Unresolved Issues
- Cuffy and Vimeux (2001) show that
- 90 of DT can be explained by variations in CO2
and CH4 - Reasonably firm grasp on causes of CH4 variations
(Monsoon forcing) - What produced CO2 variations?
- Variations are large 30
- Show rapid changes drop of 90 ppm from
interglacial to glacial
2Physical Oceanographic Changes in CO2
- During glaciations physical properties change
- Temperature and salinity
- Affect solubility of CO2(aq) and thus pCO2
3Exchange of Carbon
- Carbon in rock reservoir exchanges slowly
- Cannot account for 90 ppm change in 103 y
- Rapid exchange of carbon must involve
near-surface reservoirs
4Changes in Soil Carbon
- Expansion of ice sheets
- Covered or displaced forests
- Coniferous and deciduous trees
- Displaced forests replaced by steppes and
grasslands - Have lower carbon biomass
- Pollen records in lakes
- Indicate glacial times were dryer and less
vegetated than interglacial - Estimates of total vegetation reduced by 25
(15-30) during glacial maxima - CO2 removed from atmosphere did not go into
vegetation on land!
5Where is the Missing Carbon?
- Carbon from reduced CO2 during glacial times
- Not explained by physical properties of surface
ocean - Did not go into biomass on land
- Must have gone into oceans
- Surface ocean not likely
- Exchanges carbon with atmosphere too rapidly
- Most areas of ocean within 30 ppm of atmosphere
- Glacial surface ocean must also have been lower,
like atmosphere - Deep ocean only likely remaining reservoir
6Interglacial-Glacial Change in Carbon
- At LGM, reduction of carbon occurred in
atmosphere, vegetation and soils on land and in
surface ocean - This carbon (1010 gigatons) must have been moved
to deep ocean
7Tracking Carbon
- d13C values can be used to determine how carbon
moved from surface reservoirs to deep ocean - Major carbon reservoirs have different amounts of
organic and inorganic carbon - Each with characteristic d13C values
8d13C Changes During Photosynthesis
- Large KIE during carbon fixation by plants
- Magnitude depends on C-fixation pathway
9d13C Tracks Carbon Transfer
- Isotope mass balance quantifies transfer of
terrestrial Corg to deep ocean - Cinorgd13Cinorg Corgd13Corg Ctotd13C
- (38,0000) (530-25) (38530x)
- Solving for x -0.34
- Just this transfer predicts a shift in deep ocean
DIC of 0.34 - Isotopic change recorded in benthic foraminifera
10Change in Benthic d13C
- Oscillations in benthic d13C correspond to
benthic d18O - 100,000 and 41,000 year cycles
- Confirm transfer of organic carbon to deep ocean
during ice sheet expansion - d13C shifts greater than 0.4
- Suggesting additional factors have affected
oceanic d13C values
11Increase the Ocean Carbon Pump
- If biological productivity and Corg export were
higher in surface waters during glacial intervals - Atmospheric CO2 could be fixed in shallow ocean
by phytoplankton - Sinking dead organic matter transfers that carbon
to the deep ocean - Biological productivity and export can only
increase if essential nutrients increase in
surface ocean - Increases in wind-driven upwelling of deep,
nutrient-rich water - Increases in the nutrient concentration of deep
water that is already upwelling
12The Iron Hypothesis
- In the 1980s, the late John Martin suggested that
- Carbon uptake during plankton growth in many
regions of the world's surface ocean - Was limited not by light or the nutrients N and P
- But by the lack of the trace metal iron
- Iron is typically added to the open ocean as a
component of dust particles
13The Iron Hypothesis
- Correlations between dust and atmospheric carbon
dioxide levels in ancient ice core records - Suggest that the ocean would respond to natural
changes in iron inputs - Higher glacial winds would increase the amount of
windblown dust containing Fe to oceans - Stimulate phytoplankton growth
- Increasing carbon uptake and decrease atmospheric
CO2 - Alter the greenhouse gas balance and climate of
the earth
14Evidence for Iron hypothesis
- Some areas of the ocean contain high amounts of
essential nutrients (N, P) - Yet low amounts of chlorophyll (HNLC)
- Phytoplankton require Fe in small amounts for
growth - Bottle experiments demonstrate conclusively
that addition of Fe stimulates phytoplankton
growth - CO2 uptake
If Iron Hypothesis increased biological pump,
iron addition must increase production and export
15Open-Ocean Iron Enrichment
- "Give me half a tanker full of iron and I'll give
you an ice age (John Martin) - Results of fertilizing large patches of the
ocean with iron - Showed strong biological response and chemical
draw-down of CO2 in the water column - But what was the fate of this carbon?
- Plant uptake of carbon in the ocean is generally
followed by zooplankton bloom - Grazers respond to the increased food supply
- Producing a blizzard of fecal pellets that
descend through the water column - Exporting the carbon to the deep sea
16Quantifying Carbon Export
- Thorium is a naturally occurring element that by
its chemical nature is "sticky" - Due to its natural radioactive properties,
relatively easy to measure. - Analysis of a series of samples collected during
the 1995 FeEx II - Indicated that as iron was added
- Plant biomass increased
- Total thorium levels decreased indicating carbon
export
17Quantifying Carbon Export
- After some delay
- Particulate organic carbon export increased in
the equatorial Pacific - Relationship between uptake and export not 11
- The iron-stimulated biological community showed
- Very high ratios of export relative to carbon
uptake - Thus the efficiency of the biological pump had
increased dramatically
18Quantifying Carbon Export
- Results of similar iron fertilization of Southern
Ocean - Slower biological response
- Total thorium levels never responded
- The biological pump was not activated
- Speculate that difference
- Slowness of the biological community's response
to stimulation in colder waters - Biological pump may have turned on later
19Persistence of Patch
- Sea surface color satellite image taken 32 days
after the addition of Fe - Colored ring indicates area of high chlorophyll
- Believed to be a result of the increased Fe
20Iron Fertilization is Hot Topic
- Iron fertilization of the ocean captured
attention of entrepreneurs and venture
capitalists - See potential for enhancing fisheries and gaining
C credits through large-scale ocean
manipulations
21Marshall Islands
- Territorial waters of the Marshall Islands
- Leased to conduct an iron fertilization
experiment - The new businesses involved suggest that
- Iron fertilization process will reduce
atmospheric CO2 levels - Allowing Marshall Islands to profit by trading
carbon credits with more industrialized nations - Increased fisheries as a consequence of enhanced
phytoplankton production - Iron additions could alter the ocean in
unforeseen ways - Creating a polluted ocean with new opportunistic
species that do not support enhanced fisheries
22d13CDIC Tracks Productivity
- Photosynthesis removes 12C from surface ocean and
exports it to deep ocean - Close correlations between d13CDIC and nutrients
23Measuring Changes in the Carbon Pump
- Greater productivity during glaciations pumps
more Corg to deep sea, reduces atmospheric CO2 - Past changes in strength of carbon pump
- Recorded in planktic and benthic foraminifer
24Past Changes in the Ocean Carbon Pump
- Dd13C planktic-benthic are tantalizingly large
when CO2 is low and small when CO2 is high - Correlation not perfect
- May explain as much as 25 ppm CO2 lowering
- Best documented in equatorial regions
- Worse in Southern Ocean
- Even HNLC regions
- Detailed records lacking
25Changes in Deep Water Circulation
- d13C can be used to trace carbon transfer
- Photosynthetic rate
- Sets d13C and nutrient levels in surface waters
- Water gets down-welled and carry the signals
- These factors can produce regional differences in
the d13CDIC - Deep waters in different ocean basins
- Monitors changes in deep water circulation with
time
26Modern Deep Ocean Circulation
- High d13C values in N. Atlantic results from
- High production in surface waters in subtropical
latitudes - Transported north and sinks
- In contrast, intermediate waters originate in
Antarctica - Seasonal production produces lower 13C enrichment
- These contrasts allows water masses to be tracked
27Atlantic Deep Water d13C
- Deep water formed in N. Atlantic have high d13C
values and low nutrient concentrations - Intermediate waters formed in the Southern Ocean
have low d13C values and high nutrient
concentrations
28d13C Aging
- As the Corg in deep water is gradually oxidized
- 12C-rich CO2 released lowering d13CDIC
- Particularly evident in deep Pacific waters
29Past Changes in d13CDIC
- d13C of benthic foraminifera indicate changes in
Atlantic deep water flow at the LGM - Northern water did not sink as deeply, not as
dense - Relative increase in water flowing from
Antarctica - Knowing the d13C of the source region (planktic
foraminifera) - Percent contribution from each region can be
determined
30Changing Sources of Atlantic Deep Water
- Long records of d13C indicate cyclic changes in
deep water sources - North sources dominate during interglacial
- Southern sources dominate during glacial
- 100,000 year cycle
- During glacial
- Low d13C water from Antarctica
- Increase flux of 12C carbon from continents
- Additive effects explains large shifts noted
earlier
31Summary
- d13C results indicate an important link
- Size of N. Hemisphere ice sheets
- Formation of deep water in N. Atlantic
- Less deep water formed in the N. Atlantic
- Every time ice sheets grew at a 100,000 year
cycle - Must have affected atmospheric CO2 concentrations
- But how?
32Changes in Ocean Chemistry
- CO2 levels in surface waters sensitive to
carbonate ion concentration - CO32- produced when corrosive bottom waters
dissolve CaCO3 - When CO32- returned to surface waters
- Combine with CO2 to form HCO3-
- Thus reducing CO2 content of surface ocean
- The corrosiveness of deep water determined by the
weight of foraminifer shells - Depth of the CCD
- Southern Ocean particularly vulnerable to changes
in carbon ion concentration
33Carbon System Controls on CO2