A seasonal tropical sink for atmospheric CO2 in the Atlantic ocean: the role of the Amazon River discharge

Citation
Jf. Ternon et al., A seasonal tropical sink for atmospheric CO2 in the Atlantic ocean: the role of the Amazon River discharge, MAR CHEM, 68(3), 2000, pp. 183-201
Citations number
69
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences","Earth Sciences
Journal title
MARINE CHEMISTRY
ISSN journal
03044203 → ACNP
Volume
68
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
183 - 201
Database
ISI
SICI code
0304-4203(200001)68:3<183:ASTSFA>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
In the western equatorial Atlantic ocean, near-surface observations show th at during summertime, the low-salinity oceanic water, arising from mixing w ith the Amazon River discharge at the equator, has low CO2 fugacity levels. Near the coast of South America where the salinities are the lowest (S < 2 0), the fugacity of oceanic CO2 decreases down to 150 mu atm and the shelf area acts as a significant sink for atmospheric CO2. The dilution effect by low-salinity water only partly accounts for the decrease in CO2, and the b iological production in the Amazon Plume water enriched in nutrients lowers dissolved inorganic carbon and decreases the fCO(2) by nearly 30%. The low -salinity Amazon water tongue spreads northwestwards along the coast by the North Brazil Current (NBC) and is deflected eastwards north of 5 degrees N in the NBC retroflection in summer. Consequently, the low-salinity and oce anic fCO(2) (below the atmospheric fCO(2) level) signatures may extend more than 2000 km eastwards. The impact of the river outflow on the air-sea CO2 exchanges in the western region is demonstrated by using the climatologies of the sea surface salinity (SSS) to estimate the magnitude of the annual net CO2 flux in the western part of the equatorial Atlantic. This is in con trast with the central and eastern parts that are sources for atmospheric C O2. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.