The impact of the South-East Madagascar Bloom on the oceanic CO 2 sink
We described new sea surface CO2 observations in the south-western Indian Ocean obtained in January 2020 when a strong bloom event occurred south-east of Madagascar and extended eastward in the oligotrophic Indian Ocean subtropical domain. Compared to previous years (1991–2019) we observed very low...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biogeosciences 2022-03, Vol.19 (5), p.1451-1468 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We described new sea surface CO2 observations in the south-western
Indian Ocean obtained in January 2020 when a strong bloom event occurred
south-east of Madagascar and extended eastward in the oligotrophic Indian
Ocean subtropical domain. Compared to previous years (1991–2019) we observed
very low fCO2 and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations (CT)
in austral summer 2020, indicative of a biologically driven process. In the
bloom, the anomaly of fCO2 and CT reached respectively −33 µatm and −42 µmol kg−1, whereas no change is observed for
alkalinity (AT). In January 2020 we estimated a local maximum of
air–sea CO2 flux at 27∘ S of −6.9 mmol m−2 d−1 (ocean sink) and −4.3 mmol m−2 d−1 when averaging the flux in the
band 26–30∘ S. In the domain 25–30∘ S, 50–60∘ E
we estimated that the bloom led to a regional carbon uptake of about −1 TgC per month in January 2020, whereas this region was previously
recognized as an ocean CO2 source or near equilibrium during this
season. Using a neural network approach that reconstructs the monthly
fCO2 fields, we estimated that when the bloom was at peak in December
2019 the CO2 sink reached −3.1 (±1.0) mmol m−2 d−1 in
the band 25–30∘ S; i.e. the model captured the impact of the
bloom. Integrated in the domain restricted to 25–30∘ S, 50–60∘ E, the region was a CO2 sink in December 2019 of −0.8 TgC per month compared to a CO2 source of +0.12 (±0.10) TgC per month in December when averaged over the period 1996–2018.
Consequently in 2019 this region was a stronger CO2 annual sink of −8.8 TgC yr−1 compared to −7.0 (±0.5) TgC yr−1 averaged over
1996–2018. In austral summer 2019–2020, the bloom was likely controlled by
a relatively deep mixed-layer depth during the preceding winter (July–September
2019) that would supply macro- and/or micro-nutrients such as iron to the surface
layer to promote the bloom that started in November 2019 in two large rings
in the Madagascar Basin. Based on measurements in January 2020, we observed
relatively high N2 fixation rates (up to 18 nmol N L−1 d−1),
suggesting that diazotrophs could play a role in the bloom in the nutrient-depleted waters. The bloom event in austral summer 2020, along with the new
carbonate system observations, represents a benchmark case for complex
biogeochemical model sensitivity studies (including the N2 fixation process
and iron supplies) for a better understanding of the origin and termination
of this still “mysterious” sporadic bloom and its impact on ocean carbon
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ISSN: | 1726-4189 1726-4189 |
DOI: | 10.5194/bg-19-1451-2022 |