Sarmiento, J. L., and J. C. Orr, 1991: Three-dimensional simulations
of the impact of the southern ocean nutrients depletion on atmospheric
CO2 and ocean chemistry. Limnology
& Oceanography, 36(8), 1928-1950.
Abstract: Surface nutrient concentrations in the Southern Ocean
are an important indicator of the atmosphere-ocean chemical balance that
played a key role in ice-age reduction of atmospheric pCO2and
would play a role in any Fe fertilization scenario for increasing oceanic
uptake of anthropogenic CO2. The response
of the ocean and atmosphere to a scenario of extreme depletion of Southern
Ocean surface nutrients by an increase in the organic matter flux to the
deep ocean is examined with a three-dimensional model of ocean circulation
coupled to a one-box model of the atmosphere. After 100 years, the increase
in the organic matter flux is 6-30 Gt C yr-1
-about twice the global new production determined by the same model for
the present ocean. The removal of nutrients from surface waters of the
Southern Ocean reduces the nutrient content of the near-surface and intermediate
depth waters of the entire ocean, resulting in a 0.5-1.9 Gt C yr-1
reduction of low-latitude new production. The deep circumpolar waters,
enriched in nutrients by regeneration of organic matter, spread into the
deep and bottom waters of the remainder of the ocean, giving an overall
downward shift of nutrients from surface and intermediate to circumpolar
and deep waters. The oceanic total C distribution is also shifted downward,
resulting in uptake of atmospheric CO2
of 46-85 ppm (98-181 Gt C) in the first 100 yr. The oxygen content shifts
upward in the water column, approximately mirroring the downward shift
of nutrients. Some of the oxygen shifted to the upper ocean escapes to
the atmosphere. As a consequence, the global average oceanic content of
oxygen, presently 168 µmol kg-1,
is reduced by 6-20 µmol kg-1, with
anoxia developing in the southwestern Indian Ocean.