The Effects of Atmospheric Inorganic Nitrogen Deposition on Ocean Biogeochemistry Aparna Krishnamurthy, J.Keith Moore, Chao Luo, Charles S. Zender, Email:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Margaret Leinen Chief Science Officer Climos Oceans: a carbon sink or sinking ecosystems?
Advertisements

Concept test We, human beings, along with all animals are causing a net increase of atmospheric CO 2 because our breath contains CO 2 when we exhale. (1)
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009.
Emissions From The Oceans To The Atmosphere Deposition From The Atmosphere To The Oceans And The Interactions Between Them Tim Jickells Laboratory for.
Calcifying plankton and their modulation of the north Atlantic, sub-arctic and European shelf-sea sinks of atmospheric carbon dioxide from Satellite Earth.
Carbon Cycle and Ecosystems Important Concerns: Potential greenhouse warming (CO 2, CH 4 ) and ecosystem interactions with climate Carbon management (e.g.,
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009.
Oxygen triple isotope composition for estimating photosynthesis rates Nir Krakauer June, 2006.
CO 2 flux in the North Pacific Alan Cohn May 10, 2006.
CO 2 in the middle troposphere Chang-Yu Ting 1, Mao-Chang Liang 1, Xun Jiang 2, and Yuk L. Yung 3 ¤ Abstract Measurements of CO 2 in the middle troposphere.
Lecture 10: Ocean Carbonate Chemistry: Ocean Distributions Controls on Distributions What is the distribution of CO 2 added to the ocean? See Section 4.4.
OCN520 Fall 2009 Mid-Term #2 Review Since Mid-Term #1 Ocean Carbonate Distributions Ocean Acidification Stable Isotopes Radioactive Isotopes Nutrients.
A framework for possible geoengineering impacts Dr Nem Vaughan Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research University of East Anglia
Observations and modeling the ocean Fe cycle: Role in the carbon cycle and state of understanding Ed Boyle Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Massachusetts.
THE ATMOSPHERE: OXIDIZING MEDIUM IN GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
Havala Olson Taylor Pye April 11, 2007 Seinfeld Group Department of Chemical Engineering California Institute of Technology The Effect of Climate Change.
The Anthropogenic Ocean Carbon Sink Alan Cohn March 29, 2006
The uptake, transport, and storage of anthropogenic CO 2 by the ocean Nicolas Gruber Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences & IGPP, UCLA.
Ocean-Atmosphere Carbon Flux: What to Consider Scott Doney (WHOI) ASCENDS Science Working Group Meeting (February 2012; NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Estimates of global biogenic isoprene emissions from the terrestrial biosphere with varying levels of CO 2 David J. Wilton 1,2*, Kirsti Ashworth 2, Juliette.
The Global Ocean Carbon Cycle Rik Wanninkhof, NOAA/AOML Annual OCO review, June 2007: Celebrating Our Past, Observing our Present, Predicting our Future:
The Other Carbon Dioxide Problem Ocean acidification is the term given to the chemical changes in the ocean as a result of carbon dioxide emissions.
Natural and Anthropogenic Carbon-Climate System Feedbacks Scott C. Doney 1, Keith Lindsay 2, Inez Fung 3 & Jasmin John 3 1-Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution;
24 Global Ecology. Figure 24.2 A Record of Coral Reef Decline.
24 Global Ecology. Global Biogeochemical Cycles Atmospheric CO 2 affects pH of the oceans by diffusing in and forming carbonic acid.
Iron and Biogeochemical Cycles
Fluxes of bio-available iron to the ocean ○ Akinori Ito Research Institute for Global Change, JAMSTEC Yan Feng Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University.
Status of the Sea Ice Model Testing of CICE4.0 in the coupled model context is underway Includes numerous SE improvements, improved ridging formulation,
Remote input of nutrients in a changing climate
Observations and modeling the ocean Fe cycle: Role in the carbon cycle and state of understanding Ed Boyle Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Massachusetts.
BGC Working Group Meeting March 2006 Update on Coupled Runs with BGC in CCSM3 Keith Lindsay, Peter Thornton & many, many others.
Coordinated by: CARBOOCEAN Marine carbon sources and sink assessment Integrated Project Contract No (GOCE) Global Change and Ecosystems.
Working Group 3: What aspects of coastal ecosystems are significant globally? Coastal Zone Impacts on Global Biogeochemistry NCAR, June 2004 Contributed.
E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Solomon et al., 2007 Chapter.
International Workshop for GODAR WESTPAC Global Ocean Data Archeology and Rescue: Scientific Needs from the Carbon Cycle Study in the Ocean Toshiro Saino.
Simulating the Southern Ocean Iron Experiment (SOFeX) using a marine ecosystem model Abstract The Southern Ocean Iron Experiment (SOFeX) was conducted.
1 UIUC ATMOS 397G Biogeochemical Cycles and Global Change Lecture 1: An Introduction Don Wuebbles Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Illinois,
Modeling the Southern Ocean Carbon Cycle Abstract We are pursuing several lines of research to improve our ability to model ecosystem dynamics and biogeochemical.
1 Basic Ocean Chemistry AOSC 620 Why do we care? Source of much food. Sink for much CO 2 and acids. Biodiversity. Great store and transport of heat. Source.
Marine Ecosystem Simulations in the Community Climate System Model
The G4-Specified Stratospheric Aerosol Experiment Alan Robock 1, Lili Xia 1 and Simone Tilmes.
CARBOOCEAN Annual Meeting – Solstrand, Norway 5-9 October 2009 WP17 Highlights: Future Scenarios with coupled carbon-climate models - 5 european modelling.
WP 11 - Biogeochemical Impacts - Kick-off meeting Nice 10 – 13/06/2008.
CCSM Biogeochemistry WG Plans CCSM1-carbon (Fung, Doney, Lindsay, John) –Interactive land (CASA’) and ocean (OCMIP’) C cycles; prognostic CO 2 for atmospheric.
Presented by LCF Climate Science Computational End Station James B. White III (Trey) Scientific Computing National Center for Computational Sciences Oak.
The Impact of Tracer Advection Schemes on Biogeochemical Tracers Keith Lindsay, NCAR Keith Moore, UC Irvine, Scott.
Overview CARBOOCEAN EU FP6 Integrated Project CARBOOCEAN ”Marine carbon sources and sinks assessment” 3rd Annual Meeting – Bremen Germany 4-7 December.
Metrics and MODIS Diane Wickland December, Biology/Biogeochemistry/Ecosystems/Carbon Science Questions: How are global ecosystems changing? (Question.
The Community Climate System Model (CCSM): An Overview Jim Hurrell Director Climate and Global Dynamics Division Climate and Ecosystem.
Quantifying the Mechanisms Governing Interannual Variability in Air-sea CO 2 Flux S. Doney & Ivan Lima (WHOI), K. Lindsay & N. Mahowald (NCAR), K. Moore.
Oceans & Anthropogenic CO 2 V.Y. Chow EPS 131.  CO 2 exchange across sea surfaces in the oceans  Measurement methods of anthropogenic CO 2  Distributions.
CARBOOCEAN Marine carbon sources and sinks assessment ”Integrated Project”, European Commission Contract no GOCE.
Simulating Southern Ocean Dynamics in Coupled Climate Models Scott Doney (WHOI) In collaboration with: Ivan Lima (WHOI) Keith Moore (UCI) Keith Lindsay.
Nitrous Oxide Focus Group Nitrous Oxide Focus Group launch event Friday February 22 nd, 2008 Dr Jan Kaiser Dr Parvadha Suntharalingam The stratospheric.
Mayurakshi Dutta Department of Atmospheric Sciences March 20, 2003
WP11 Model performance assessment and initial fields for scenarios. Objectives and deliverables To determine, how well biogeochemical ocean general circulation.
Chemistry-climate interactions in CCSM
Estimation of Fe and Al aerosol solubility
Effect of anthropogenic nitrogen depositions on atmospheric CO2
Pre-anthropogenic C cycle and recent perturbations
PROJECTED SEASONALITY IN OCEAN ACIDIFCATION IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC REGION by 2100 Sri Nandini1, 2, Helene Jacot Des Combes1, Andrew Lenton3 and Mareva.
Impact of Solar and Sulfate Geoengineering on Surface Ozone
IPCC Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis
CCSM Biogeochemistry WG Plans
North African dust: Natalie Mahowald and others
222Rn, oxygen, nutrients (nitrate, ammonia, phosphate)
The Oceanic Sink Uptake in the mixed layer
Iron and Biogeochemical Cycles
Shiliang Wu1 Loretta J. Mickley1, Daniel J
Pick one idea out of all this?
Presentation transcript:

The Effects of Atmospheric Inorganic Nitrogen Deposition on Ocean Biogeochemistry Aparna Krishnamurthy, J.Keith Moore, Chao Luo, Charles S. Zender, University of California, Irvine (UCI), Dept. of Earth System Science, Irvine, California. Abstract: We examine the response of three different atmospheric inorganic nitrogen deposition scenarios namely, pre-industrial, during 1990’s, and one Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) prediction for 2100, on ocean biogeochemistry and air-sea CO 2 exchange. As N deposition increased N fixation decreased as the diazotrophs were out competed by diatoms and small phytoplankton. This decrease in N fixation partially counter acts the increase in atmospheric N deposition. Integrated globally the increase in N deposition from pre-industrial times led to a small increase in export production, which led to a small decrease in atmospheric pCO 2. Methods: Simulations were done using the Biogeochemical Elemental Cycling (BEC) model (Moore et al., 2004) run within the NCAR CCSM3 POP Ocean model (resolution: 3.6° longitude and 0.9°-2.0° latitude) (Collins et al., 2006; Yeager et al., 2006). As nutrient concentrations vary the model can simulate the changes in phytoplankton community structure, sinking Particulate Organic Carbon (POC) export rates and air-sea CO 2 exchange. In a recent study using the BEC model, changes in atmospheric dust inputs was found to impact nitrogen fixation and sinking export at various regions of the world ocean, leading to changes in global air-sea CO 2 exchange (Moore et al., 2006). Another study using the BEC model quantified the key role played by dissolved iron over global oceans in driving marine nitrogen fixation and denitrification (Moore and Doney, submitted). Details about the BEC model can be found in Moore et al., (2004). Dust deposition in our simulations was from Zender et al., (2003) assuming 5% surface solubility. Atmospheric inputs of inorganic nitrogen to oceans during 1990’s were obtained from a control simulation using the UCI global Chemistry transport Model (UCICTM) (Prather et al., 1987; Jacob et al., 1997; Olsen et al., 2000; and Bian and Prather 2003; Bian and Zender 2003) embedded within an aerosol equilibrium model (Metzger et al., 2002a) which accounted for partitioning of nitrogen aerosols between ammonium and nitrate (Luo et al., submitted). For this work oceanic ammonia emissions were not included. Thus, we examine only the net land to sea N fluxes. The pre-industrial and IPCC inorganic nitrogen estimates were obtained as part of sensitivity studies. In the pre-industrial simulations anthropogenic sources were excluded and for IPCC runs CO, SO x, NO x and CH 4 were scaled based on IPCC A1B suggested values. Acknowledgements: This work was supported by funding from NSF grant OCE to Moore and Zender and by the Climate Simulation Laboratory at National Center for Atmospheric Research. The National Center for Atmospheric Research is sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation. References: Bian, H., and M. J. Prather, FastJ2: Accurate simulation of stratospheric photolysis in global chemistry models, J. Atmos. Chem., 41, , Bian, H., and C. S. Zender, Mineral dust and global tropospheric chemistry: Relative roles of photolysis and heterogeneous uptake, J. Geophys. Res., 108, 4672, doi: /2002JD003143, Collins W.D., M. Blackmon, C.M. Bitz, G.B. Bonan, C.S. Bretherton, J.A. Carton, P. Chang, S. Doney, J.J. Hack, J.T. Kiehl, T. Henderson, W.G. Large, D. McKenna, and B.D. Santer, The Community Climate System Model: CCSM3. J. Climate, in press. Jacob, D.J., Prather, M.J., et al., Evaluation and Intercomparison of global atmospheric transport models using 222Rn and other short lived tracers, J. Geophys. Res., 102, , Luo et al., Role of ammonia chemistry and coarse mode aerosols in global climatological inorganic aerosol distributions, 2006 submitted to Atmos. Environ. Moore et al., Nitrogen fixation amplifies the ocean biogeochemical response to decadal timescale variations in mineral dust deposition, Tellus B, International CO2 conference Special issue, 2006 Moore and Doney, Iron availability limits the ocean nitrogen inventory stabilizing feedbacks between marine denitrification and nitrogen fixation, submitted May 2006 to GBC. Moore, J.K., S.C. Doney, Lindsay Keith, 2004, Upper ocean ecosystem dynamics and iron cycling in a global three-dimensional model, Global Biogeochemical cycles, 18, GB4028, doi: /2004GB Metzger, S., F. Dentener, S. Pandis, and J. Lelieveld, Gas/aerosol partitioning: I. A computationally efficient model, J. Geophys. Res., 107, 4312, /2001JD001102, 2002a. Olsen, S.C., Hannegan, B.J., Zhu, X., and Prather, M.J., Evaluating ozone depletion from very shortlived halocarbons, Geophys. Res. Lett., 27, , Prather, M.J., MeElroy, M.B., Wofsy, S.C., Russell, G., and Rind, D., Chemistry of the global troposphere: Fluorocarbon as tracers of air motion, J. Geophys. Res., 92, ,1987. Yeager, S.G., Large, W.G., Hack, J.J., Shields, C.A., The Low Resolution CCSM3, J. Climate, in press. Zender, C. S., H. Bian, and D. Newman (2003), The Mineral Dust Entrainment And Deposition (DEAD) model: Description and 1990s dust climatology, J. Geophys. Res., 108(D14), 4416, doi: /2002JD Discussion: Regions which were N limited prior to increased atmospheric N inputs become less N stressed after N additions, with increased export production and oceanic uptake of CO 2. As the deposition increased in our simulations from pre-industrial levels, small phytoplankton and diatoms grow more efficiently relative to diazotrophs. As P and Fe get increasingly depleted at higher N deposition, the diazotrophs become more P and Fe stressed reducing N fixation. The decrease in oceanic N fixation partially compensates for the increase in atmospheric N inputs. Results: Model was spun up for 500 years with pre-industrial N deposition. Then three different nitrogen deposition forcings (shown in figure 1) were simulated for 48 years. Figure 2 shows the diatom, small phytoplankton and diazotroph growth limitation over the world ocean from year 48. Globally there was a decrease in N limitation for diatoms and small phytoplankton, Fe, P and light limitation increased for all phytoplankton. Figure 3a and 3b shows the differences of global distributions of N deposition, N fixation, POC export and Sea to Air CO 2 exchange relative to pre-industrial conditions. POC export and oceanic uptake of atmospheric CO 2 increased slightly across much of the globe excluding the Southern Ocean. The Sea to Air CO 2 flux increase in Southern Ocean and subarctic North Pacific was associated with the upwelling of inorganic carbon enriched waters as a result of increased export in the nearby waters. Table 1 summarizes net oceanic N deposition, primary production, N fixation, sinking POC for year 48 and atmospheric pCO 2 at the end of 48 years. Values in parenthesis in column 3 and 4 show the difference of these values from pre- industrial conditions. N deposition increased by 16 Tg in 1990’s and by 22 Tg in the IPCC simulation. Primary production and export increase while N fixation and atmospheric pCO 2 decrease as the atmospheric inorganic N deposition increased. Figure 4 shows the potential contribution of atmospheric N deposition to sinking Particulate Organic Nitrogen (PON). Globally it increased over a wide area as deposition increased. The high fractions in the subtropical N. Atlantic and Arctic oceans reflect mainly very low export production in those regions. In the N-limited regions (Figure 2) atmospheric nitrogen deposition is directly increasing export by the fractions shown in Figure 4. Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3b Table 1 Figure 3a Different Inorganic Nitrogen deposition scenarios Pre-Industrial1990'sIPCC-2100 A1B Oceanic N deposition (Tg N) (16.77) (21.16) Total primary production (Gt C) (0.366) (0.4615) Total nitrogen fixation (Tg N) (-4.165) (-5.212) Total sinking POC (Gt C) (0.054) (0.076) Atmospheric pCO 2 at the end of 48 years (ppm) (-0.497) (-0.639) Figure 4