Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change

View through CrossRef
<p>As the planet warms due to anthropogenic CO2 emissions, the interaction of surface ocean carbonate chemistry and the radiative forcing of atmospheric CO2 leads to the global ocean sequestering heat and carbon, in a ratio that is near constant in time: this enables patterns of ocean heat and carbon uptake to be derived. Patterns of ocean salinity also change as the earth system warms due to hydrological cycle intensification and perturbations to air-sea freshwater fluxes.<br>Local temperature and salinity change in the ocean may result from perturbed air-sea fluxes of heat and freshwater (excess temperature, salinity), or from reorganisation of the preindustrial temperature and salinity fields (redistributed temperature, salinity).<br>Here, we present a novel method in which the redistribution of preindustrial carbon is diagnosed, and the redistribution of temperature and salinity estimated using only local spatial information.<br>We demonstrate this technique in the NEMO OGCM coupled to the MEDUSA-2 Biogeochemistry model under a RCP8.5 scenario over 1860-2099. <br>The excess changes are thus calculated.<br>We demonstrate that a global ratio between excess heat and temperature is largely appropriately regionally with key regional differences consistent with reduced efficiency in the transport of carbon through the mixed layer base at high latitudes.<br>On centennial timescales, excess heat increases everywhere, with 25+/-2 of annual global heat uptake in the North Atlantic over the 21st century.<br>Excess salinity meanwhile increases in the Atlantic but is generally negative in other basins, consistent with increasing atmospheric transport of freshwater out of the Atlantic.<br>In the North Atlantic, changes in the inventory of excess salinity are detectable in the late 19th century, whereas increases in the inventory of excess heat does not become significant until the early 21st <span>century. </span>This is consistent with previous studies which find salinification of the Subtropical North Atlantic to be an early fingerprint of anthropogenic climate change.</p><p>Over the full simulation, we also find the imprint of AMOC slowdown through significant redistribution of heat away from the North Atlantic, and of salinity to the South Atlantic.<br>Globally, temperature change at 2000m is accounted for both by redistributed and excess heat, but for salinity the excess component accounts for the majority of changes at the surface and at depth. <br>This indicates that the circulation variability contributes significantly less to changes in ocean salinity than to heat content.</p><p>By the end of the simulation excess heat is the largest contribution to density change and steric sea level rise, while excess salinity greatly reduces spatial variability in steric sea level rise through density compensation of excess temperature patterns, particularly in the Atlantic.<br>In the Atlantic, redistribution of the preindustrial heat and salinity fields also produce generally compensating changes in sea level, though this compensation is less clear elsewhere.</p><p>The regional strength of excess heat and salinity signal grows through the model run in response to the evolving forcing.<br>In addition, the regional strength of the redistributed temperature and salinity signals also grow, indicating increasing circulation variability or systematic circulation change on timescales of at least the model run.</p>
Title: Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change
Description:
<p>As the planet warms due to anthropogenic CO2 emissions, the interaction of surface ocean carbonate chemistry and the radiative forcing of atmospheric CO2 leads to the global ocean sequestering heat and carbon, in a ratio that is near constant in time: this enables patterns of ocean heat and carbon uptake to be derived.
Patterns of ocean salinity also change as the earth system warms due to hydrological cycle intensification and perturbations to air-sea freshwater fluxes.
<br>Local temperature and salinity change in the ocean may result from perturbed air-sea fluxes of heat and freshwater (excess temperature, salinity), or from reorganisation of the preindustrial temperature and salinity fields (redistributed temperature, salinity).
<br>Here, we present a novel method in which the redistribution of preindustrial carbon is diagnosed, and the redistribution of temperature and salinity estimated using only local spatial information.
<br>We demonstrate this technique in the NEMO OGCM coupled to the MEDUSA-2 Biogeochemistry model under a RCP8.
5 scenario over 1860-2099.
 <br>The excess changes are thus calculated.
<br>We demonstrate that a global ratio between excess heat and temperature is largely appropriately regionally with key regional differences consistent with reduced efficiency in the transport of carbon through the mixed layer base at high latitudes.
<br>On centennial timescales, excess heat increases everywhere, with 25+/-2 of annual global heat uptake in the North Atlantic over the 21st century.
<br>Excess salinity meanwhile increases in the Atlantic but is generally negative in other basins, consistent with increasing atmospheric transport of freshwater out of the Atlantic.
<br>In the North Atlantic, changes in the inventory of excess salinity are detectable in the late 19th century, whereas increases in the inventory of excess heat does not become significant until the early 21st <span>century.
 </span>This is consistent with previous studies which find salinification of the Subtropical North Atlantic to be an early fingerprint of anthropogenic climate change.
</p><p>Over the full simulation, we also find the imprint of AMOC slowdown through significant redistribution of heat away from the North Atlantic, and of salinity to the South Atlantic.
<br>Globally, temperature change at 2000m is accounted for both by redistributed and excess heat, but for salinity the excess component accounts for the majority of changes at the surface and at depth.
 <br>This indicates that the circulation variability contributes significantly less to changes in ocean salinity than to heat content.
</p><p>By the end of the simulation excess heat is the largest contribution to density change and steric sea level rise, while excess salinity greatly reduces spatial variability in steric sea level rise through density compensation of excess temperature patterns, particularly in the Atlantic.
<br>In the Atlantic, redistribution of the preindustrial heat and salinity fields also produce generally compensating changes in sea level, though this compensation is less clear elsewhere.
</p><p>The regional strength of excess heat and salinity signal grows through the model run in response to the evolving forcing.
<br>In addition, the regional strength of the redistributed temperature and salinity signals also grow, indicating increasing circulation variability or systematic circulation change on timescales of at least the model run.
</p>.

Related Results

Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change
Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change
Abstract. As the planet warms due to the accumulation of anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere, the interaction of surface ocean carbonate chemistry and the radiative forcing of atmo...
Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change
Decomposing oceanic temperature and salinity change using ocean carbon change
Abstract. As the planet warms due to the accumulation of anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere, the global ocean uptake of heat can largely be described as a linear function of anthr...
Access impact of observations
Access impact of observations
The accuracy of the Copernicus Marine Environment and Monitoring Service (CMEMS) ocean analysis and forecasts highly depend on the availability and quality of observations to be as...
Exploring community-based adaptive approaches in agriculture and water management to address salinity impacts in coastal Bangladesh
Exploring community-based adaptive approaches in agriculture and water management to address salinity impacts in coastal Bangladesh
The coastal region of Bangladesh is greatly impacted by high soil and water salinity levels, worsened by tropical cyclones and rising sea levels. Understanding the extent of salini...
Oceanic detachments in Tethys realm: core complexe or not?
Oceanic detachments in Tethys realm: core complexe or not?
Oceanic detachments are large-offset normal faults along the flanks of mid-ocean ridges. They represent a mode of accretion of the oceanic lithosphere that is fundamentally differe...
Carbon export in the land-to-ocean aquatic continuum (LOAC) of China
Carbon export in the land-to-ocean aquatic continuum (LOAC) of China
It has long been recognized that terrestrial ecosystems are not isolated from other earth systems with all the absorbed carbon being permanently sequestered on land. Inland water s...
Ocean dynamics amplify non-local warming effects of forestation
Ocean dynamics amplify non-local warming effects of forestation
Large-scale forestation, including reforestation, afforestation, and forest restoration, is prevalent in net zero climate strategies due to the carbon sequestration potential of fo...

Back to Top