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- Title
Temporal dynamics of surface ocean carbonate chemistry in response to natural and simulated upwelling events during the 2017 coastal El Niño near Callao, Peru.
- Authors
Chen, Shao-Min; Riebesell, Ulf; Schulz, Kai G.; von der Esch, Elisabeth; Achterberg, Eric P.; Bach, Lennart T.
- Abstract
Oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) are characterized by enhanced carbon dioxide (CO 2) levels and low pH and are being further acidified by uptake of anthropogenic atmospheric CO 2. With ongoing intensification and expansion of OMZs due to global warming, carbonate chemistry conditions may become more variable and extreme, particularly in the eastern boundary upwelling systems. In austral summer (February–April) 2017, a large-scale mesocosm experiment was conducted in the coastal upwelling area off Callao (Peru) to investigate the impacts of ongoing ocean deoxygenation on biogeochemical processes, coinciding with a rare coastal El Niño event. Here we report on the temporal dynamics of carbonate chemistry in the mesocosms and surrounding Pacific waters over a continuous period of 50 d with high-temporal-resolution observations (every second day). The mesocosm experiment simulated an upwelling event in the mesocosms by addition of nitrogen (N)-deficient and CO 2 -enriched OMZ water. Surface water in the mesocosms was acidified by the OMZ water addition, with pH T lowered by 0.1–0.2 and p CO 2 elevated to above 900 µ atm. Thereafter, surface p CO 2 quickly dropped to near or below the atmospheric level (405.22 µ atm in 2017; Dlugokencky and Tans, 2021; NOAA/Global Monitoring Laboratory (GML)) mainly due to enhanced phytoplankton production with rapid CO 2 consumption. Further observations revealed that the dominance of the dinoflagellate Akashiwo sanguinea and contamination of bird excrements played important roles in the dynamics of carbonate chemistry in the mesocosms. Compared to the simulated upwelling, natural upwelling events in the surrounding Pacific waters occurred more frequently with sea-to-air CO 2 fluxes of 4.2–14.0 mmol C m -2 d -1. The positive CO 2 fluxes indicated our site was a local CO 2 source during our study, which may have been impacted by the coastal El Niño. However, our observations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) drawdown in the mesocosms suggest that CO 2 fluxes to the atmosphere can be largely dampened by biological processes. Overall, our study characterized carbonate chemistry in nearshore Pacific waters that are rarely sampled in such a temporal resolution and hence provided unique insights into the CO 2 dynamics during a rare coastal El Niño event.
- Subjects
UNITED States. National Oceanic &; Atmospheric Administration; SURFACE dynamics; OCEAN dynamics; ATMOSPHERIC carbon dioxide; CARBON dioxide; UPWELLING (Oceanography); GLOBAL warming; INTEGRATED coastal zone management
- Publication
Biogeosciences, 2022, Vol 19, Issue 2, p295
- ISSN
1726-4170
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5194/bg-19-295-2022