9:30 AM - 9:45 AM
[AOS23-03] Estimation of the increase in the anthropogenic carbon dioxide column inventory in the 137°E section by the eMLR method
Keywords:anthropogenic CO2, 137°E section, column inventory
nDIC* = {DIC – 117/170 · (O2sat – O2)} · 35/S,
NO = O2 + 170/16 · NO3+ (Anderson and Sarmiento, 1994).
NO is preformed oxygen concentration calculated using nitrate concentration. It is a quasi-conservative tracer that does not change with biological activity in the same water mass.
nDIC* and NO are linearly correlated to each other below the winter mixed layer in the subtropical zone between 19°N and 34°N:
nDIC* = a + b · NO.
In the tropics to the south of 18°N, their relationships show non-linearity due to the north-south fluctuation of the North Equatorial Current and mixing with the water mass from the Southern Ocean. We then calculated the differences in nDIC* among three cruises in 1994, 2010 and 2016 in the subtropics between 19°N and 34°N using the difference in the slope b in the above equation, and integrated over the water column above σθ = 27.3 to estimate the column inventory of anthropogenic CO2. The rates of increase in the anthropogenic CO2 inventory were 0.83, 0.67 and 0.62 mol/m2/year (preliminary) at 30°N, 25°N and 20°N, respectively, for 22 years between 1994 and 2016, and 1.84, 1.57 and 1.44 mol/m2/year (preliminary) at 30°N, 25°N and 20°N, respectively, for 6 years between 2010 and 2016 (Fig. 1). The higher rate in the northern subtropics is attributable to the deeper ventilation (Fig. 2). It is also higher for the period from 2010 to 2016 than that from 1994 to 2016. We will also study in the different water masses such as those in the tropical zone and above the bottom of winter mixed layer where the relationship between nDIC* and NO shows non-linearity.