A high-quality inorganic carbon system database, spanning over three decades (1981-2006) and comprising of 13 cruises, has allowed the applying of the C ° T method and coming up with estimates of the anthropogenic CO 2 (C ant) stored in the main water masses of the North Atlantic. In the studied region, strong convective processes convey surface properties, like C ant, into deeper ocean layers and grants this region an added oceanographic interest from the point of view of air-sea CO 2 exchanges. Generally, a tendency for decreasing C ant storage rates towards the deep layers has been observed. In the Iberian Basin, the North Atlantic Deep Water has low C ant concentrations and negligible storage rates, while the North Atlantic Central Water in the upper layers shows the largest C ant values and the largest annual increase of its average concentration (1.13 ± 0.14 μmol kg -1 yr -1). This unmatched rate of change in the C ant concentration of the warm upper limb of the Meridional Overturning Circulation decreases towards the Irminger basin (0.68 ± 0.06 μmol kg -1 yr -1) due to the lowering of the buffering capacity. The mid and deep waters in the Irminger Sea show rather similar C ant concentration rates of increase (between 0.33 and 0.45 μmol kg -1 yr -1), whereas in the Iceland basin these layers seem to have been less affected by C ant. Overall, the C ant storage rates in the North Atlantic subpolar gyre during the first half of the 1990s, when a high North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) phase was dominant, are ∼48% higher than during the 1997-2006 low NAO phase that followed. This result suggests that a net decrease in the strength of the North Atlantic sink of atmospheric CO 2 has taken place during the present decade. The changes in deep-water ventilation are the main driving processes causing this weakening of the North Atlantic CO 2 sink. © 2010 Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Pérez, F. F., Vázquez-Rodríguez, M., Mercier, H., Velo, A., Lherminier, P., & Ríos, A. F. (2010). Trends of anthropogenic CO2 storage in North Atlantic water masses. Biogeosciences, 7(5), 1789–1807. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-7-1789-2010
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