Continuous underway measurements of atmospheric and surface seawater p
CO(2) were collected on numerous cruises in the Sargasso Sea (32 degre
es N, 64 degrees W) near Bermuda from June 1994 to November 1995. We o
bserved that seawater pCO(2) was highly variable on different timescal
es, ranging from diel to seasonal. On diel timescales, pCO(2) changes
of 5-25 mu atm occurred in response to diurnal warming and cooling ass
ociated with solar heat fluxes. Over longer timescales, pCO(2) was inf
luenced by atmospheric forcing and tropical cyclones. For example, a s
urface cooling of 3 degrees C and decrease in pCO(2) of 45-50 mu atm o
ccurred after Hurricane Felix passed near Bermuda in August 1995. The
decrease in pCO(2) was significant considering the annual change was 9
0-100 mu atm. Over all timescales, temperature was the dominant contro
l on pCO(2) variability. We found that surface pCO(2) conditions were
accurately predicted from temperatures with small errors (4-9 mu atm)
if seasonal pCO(2)-temperature relationships were established. In futu
re synthesis of regional p CO2 data it should be feasible to use surfa
ce temperature, remotely sensed from space, as a tool for extrapolatio
n over wider spatial scales in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre. Ne
t annual fluxes of CO2 for 1994 and 1995 (-0.25 to -0.6 mol CO2 m(-2)
yr(-1)) were directed from atmosphere to ocean and were similar to val
ues reported for 1989-1993 by Bares et al. [1996b]. We found that shor
t-term variability of pCO(2) (diel warming and cooling or atmospheric
forcing), frequency of sampling (every 3-4 days or monthly), or use of
temperature-derived pCO(2) did not affect estimates of net yearly CO2
fluxes by more than 10-20%. However, strong winds associated with hur
ricanes decreased the net annual flux of CO2 into the ocean by 19-28%
in 1995. The major sources of error for air-sea gas exchange was uncer
tainty associated with gas transfer-wind speed relationships and diffe
rences in the types of wind speed data used (daily averaged versus cli
matological). Such uncertainties make it difficult to quantify the con
tribution of gas exchange to the carbon cycle and the balance of carbo
n import and export terms in the upper ocean of the Sargasso Sea.