Author:
Behncke Jacqueline,Landschützer Peter,Tanhua Toste
Abstract
AbstractThe sailboat Seaexplorer collected underway sea surface partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) data for 129 days (2018–2021), including an Antarctic circumnavigation. By comparing ensembles of data-driven air-sea CO2 fluxes computed with and without sailboat data and applying a detection algorithm, we show that these sailboat observations significantly increase the regional carbon uptake in the North Atlantic and decrease it in the Southern Ocean. While compensating changes in both basins limit the global effect, the Southern Ocean–particularly frontal regions (40°S–60°S) during summertime—exhibited the largest air-sea CO2 flux changes, averaging 20% of the regional mean. Assessing the sensitivity of the air-sea CO2 flux to measurement uncertainty, the results stay robust within the expected random measurement uncertainty (± 5 μatm) but remain undetectable with a measurement offset of 5 µatm. We thus conclude that sailboats fill essential measurement gaps in remote ocean regions.
Funder
International Max Planck Research School on Earth System Modelling
European Community’s Horizon 2020 Project
Shaping an Ocean Of Possibilities for science-industry collaboration funded by the Helmholtz association
Max Planck Institute for Meteorology
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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