DISSOLVED ORGANIC-MATTER AND THE GLACIAL-INTERGLACIAL PCO2 PROBLEM

Citation
D. Paillard et al., DISSOLVED ORGANIC-MATTER AND THE GLACIAL-INTERGLACIAL PCO2 PROBLEM, Global biogeochemical cycles, 7(4), 1993, pp. 901-914
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary","Environmental Sciences
ISSN journal
08866236
Volume
7
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
901 - 914
Database
ISI
SICI code
0886-6236(1993)7:4<901:DOATGP>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Two box models, one analytical and one numerical, are used to investig ate systematically a broad range of oceanic circulation changes on the atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration. A number of oceanic c arbon cycle models have failed to reproduce the 30% increase in CO2 pa rtial pressure (pCO2) during the last deglaciation as reconstructed fr om polar ice cores. We apply therefore this approach of exploring the model's parameter space to examine the effect of long-lived dissolved organic matter on the system. The results from the two models compleme nt each other, in terms of insight versus detail. Carbon is usually as sumed to be transported from the surface into the deep ocean through t he sedimentation of particulate matter. If there exists in the ocean a pool of dissolved organic matter (DOM) with a regeneration time compa rable with the advection time, then the associated carbon can also be advected, resulting in a different distribution. Such a DOM reservoir acts as a smoother on the spatial distribution of nutrients in the sea , particularly in the equatorial intermediate waters. We establish the role of intermediate waters as one of the key components of the ocean ic carbon cycle and show that DOM reduces the sensitivity of the carbo n cycle to oceanic circulation pattern changes, mainly because of its smoothing effect. Consequently, the possible existence of DOM species with a time constant of the order of a century tends to reduce, rather than enhance, the glacial-interglacial difference in pCO2 levels due to changes in the thermohaline circulation.