An iceberg in the Weddell Sea, Southern Ocean. Credit: Alfred Wegener Institute / Mario Hopmmann
Climate
models suggest that climate change could reduce the Southern Ocean's ability to
absorb carbon dioxide (CO2).
However, observational data actually shows that this ability has seen no
significant decline in recent decades.
In a recent study, researchers from the
Alfred Wegener Institute have discovered what may be causing this. Low-salinity
water in the upper ocean has typically helped to trap carbon in the deep ocean,
which in turn has slowed its release into the atmosphere—until now, that is,
because climate change is
increasingly altering the Southern Ocean and its function as a carbon sink. The
study is published in the journal Nature
Climate Change.
Oceans absorb around a quarter of all
anthropogenic CO2 emissions
released into the atmosphere. Of this total, the Southern Ocean alone stores
roughly 40%, making it a key region for containing global warming. The Southern
Ocean's important role comes about due to the ocean circulation in the region,
whereby water masses upwell from deeper levels, are renewed and then return to
the depths. This process releases natural CO2 from the deep ocean and absorbs and stores
anthropogenic CO2 from
the atmosphere.
How well the Southern Ocean is able to
absorb anthropogenic CO2 depends
on how much natural CO2 comes
to the surface from the deep ocean: the more natural CO2 that
rises to the surface from the deeper levels, the less anthropogenic CO2 the
Southern Ocean is able to absorb. This process is controlled by ocean
circulation and the stratification of different water masses.
The water that upwells from the depths
in the Southern Ocean is extremely old, having not been at the surface for
hundreds or thousands of years. Over time, it has accumulated large amounts of
CO2 which
naturally return to the surface through the upwelling process. Model studies
show that strengthening westerly winds, caused by climate change, will cause
more and more of this CO2-rich deep water to rise to the surface. In the long term, this
would reduce the Southern Ocean's capacity to absorb human-made CO2.
However, contrary to climate model
projections, observational data from
recent decades have shown no reduction in its capacity as a CO2 sink.
A new study from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Center for Polar and
Marine Research (AWI) now provides an explanation as to why, despite
strengthening westerly winds, the Southern Ocean has continued to act as a CO2 sink
in recent decades and has therefore been able to slow down climate change.
"Deep water in the Southern Ocean
is normally found below 200 meters," says Dr. Léa Olivier, AWI
oceanographer and lead author of the study. "It is salty, nutrient-rich
and relatively warm compared to water nearer the surface."
The deep water contains a large amount
of dissolved CO₂ that
entered the deep ocean from the surface a long time ago. Near-surface water, on the other hand, is less salty, colder and
contains less CO₂. As long
as the density stratification between deep and surface water remains intact, CO₂ from the deeper layers cannot easily rise to the
surface.
Cold, low-salinity water keeps carbon-rich water contained—however, climate
change brings CO₂ dangerously close to the surface
"Previous studies suggested
that global climate change would strengthen the westerly winds over the
Southern Ocean, and with that, the overturning circulation too," says
Olivier. "However, that would transport more carbon-rich water from the
deep ocean to the surface, which would consequently reduce the Southern Ocean's
ability to store CO₂."
Although strengthening winds have
already been observed and attributed to human-made change in recent modeling
and observational studies, there is no evidence pointing to the Southern Ocean
absorbing less CO₂—at least at this point.
Long-term observations by the AWI
and other international research institutes suggest that climate change may be
affecting the properties of surface and deep water masses.
"In our study, we used a
dataset comprising biogeochemical data from a large number of marine
expeditions in the Southern Ocean between 1972 and 2021. We looked for
long-term anomalies, as well as changes in both circulation patterns and the
properties of water masses. In doing so, we only considered processes related
to the exchange between the two water masses, namely circulation and mixing,
and not biological processes, for example," explains Olivier. "We
were able to determine that, since the 1990s, the two water masses have become
more distinct from one another."
The Southern Ocean's surface water
salinity has reduced as a result of increased input of freshwater caused by
precipitation and melting glaciers and sea ice. This "freshening"
reinforces the density stratification between the two water masses, which in
turn keeps the CO₂-rich deep water trapped in the lower layer and prevents it from breaking
through the barrier between the two layers.
"Our study shows that this
fresher surface water has temporarily offset the weakening of the carbon sink
in the Southern Ocean, as model simulations predicted. However, this situation
could reverse if the stratification were to weaken," summarizes Olivier.
There is a risk of this happening,
as the strengthening westerly winds push the deep water ever closer to the
surface. Since the 1990s, the upper boundary of the deep water mass has shifted
roughly 40 meters closer to the surface, where CO₂-rich water is increasingly replacing the low-salinity
winter surface water. As the transition layer between surface and deep water
moves closer to the surface, it becomes more susceptible to mixing, which could
be primarily caused by the strengthening westerly winds. Such mixing would release the CO₂ that had accumulated beneath the surface water layer.
A recently published
study suggests
that this process may have already begun. The result would be that more CO₂-rich deep water could reach the surface, which would
in turn reduce the Southern Ocean's capacity to absorb anthropogenic CO₂ and therefore further drive climate change.
"What surprised me most was
that we actually found the answer to our question beneath the surface. "We
need to look beyond just the ocean's surface, otherwise we run the risk of
missing a key part of the story," says Olivier.
"To confirm whether more CO₂ has been released from the deep ocean in recent years, we need additional data, particularly from the winter months, when the water masses tend to mix," explains Prof. Alexander Haumann, co-author of the study. "In the coming years, the AWI is planning to carefully examine these exact processes as part of the international Antarctica InSync program, and gain a better understanding of the effects of climate change on the Southern Ocean and potential interactions."

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