Ts. Bates et al., REGIONAL AND SEASONAL-VARIATIONS IN THE FLUX OF OCEANIC CARBON-MONOXIDE TO THE ATMOSPHERE, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 100(D11), 1995, pp. 23093-23101
Carbon monoxide (CO) is produced photochemically in the surface ocean
and emitted to the atmosphere. To assess the magnitude of this ocean-a
tmosphere flux, seawater and atmospheric CO mole fractions were measur
ed on six cruises throughout the Pacific Ocean from 1987 to 1994. The
results showed consistent regional and seasonal variations in surface
seawater CO concentrations with daily averaged concentrations ranging
from 0.1 to 4.7 nM. Based on the concentration fields, the data were d
ivided into four seasons and 10 latitude zones from 75 degrees S to 75
degrees N. Using monthly Comprehensive Ocean-Atmosphere Data Set wind
and surface seawater temperature data and the Wanninkhof [1992] wind
speed/transfer velocity relationship, the calculated zonal average flu
xes ranged from 0.25 to 13 mu mol/m(2)/d. The combined seasonal and zo
nal fluxes result in a total global flux of 0.46 Tmol CO/y with 2/3 of
this flux in the southern hemisphere. The estimated uncertainty in th
is number is approximately a factor of 2.