MIT Study: Weaker ocean circulation could enhance CO2 buildup in the atmosphere
https://news.mit.edu/2024/study-weaker-ocean-circulation-could-enhance-co2-buildup-atmosphere-0708Study: Weaker ocean circulation could enhance CO2 buildup in the atmosphere
New findings challenge current thinking on the oceans role in storing carbon.
Jennifer Chu | MIT News
Publication Date: July 8, 2024
As climate change advances, the oceans overturning circulation is predicted to weaken substantially. With such a slowdown, scientists estimate the ocean will pull down less carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. However, a slower circulation should also dredge up less carbon from the deep ocean that would otherwise be released back into the atmosphere. On balance, the ocean should maintain its role in reducing carbon emissions from the atmosphere, if at a slower pace.
However, a new study by an MIT researcher finds that scientists may have to rethink the relationship between the oceans circulation and its long-term capacity to store carbon. As the ocean gets weaker, it could release more carbon from the deep ocean into the atmosphere instead.
The reason has to do with a previously uncharacterized feedback between the oceans available iron, upwelling carbon and nutrients, surface microorganisms, and a little-known class of molecules known generally as ligands. When the ocean circulates more slowly, all these players interact in a self-perpetuating cycle that ultimately increases the amount of carbon that the ocean outgases back to the atmosphere.
By isolating the impact of this feedback, we see a fundamentally different relationship between ocean circulation and atmospheric carbon levels, with implications for the climate, says study author Jonathan Lauderdale, a research scientist in MITs Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences. What we thought is going on in the ocean is completely overturned.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-49274-1