Login / Signup

Regional and global impact of CO 2 uptake in the Benguela Upwelling System through preformed nutrients.

Claire SiddiquiTim RixenNiko LahajnarAnja K Van der PlasDeon C LouwTarron LamontKeshnee Pillay
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Eastern Boundary Upwelling Systems (EBUS) are highly productive ecosystems. However, being poorly sampled and represented in global models, their role as atmospheric CO 2 sources and sinks remains elusive. In this work, we present a compilation of shipboard measurements over the past two decades from the Benguela Upwelling System (BUS) in the southeast Atlantic Ocean. Here, the warming effect of upwelled waters increases CO 2 partial pressure (pCO 2 ) and outgassing in the entire system, but is exceeded in the south through biologically-mediated CO 2 uptake through biologically unused, so-called preformed nutrients supplied from the Southern Ocean. Vice versa, inefficient nutrient utilization leads to preformed nutrient formation, increasing pCO 2 and counteracting human-induced CO 2 invasion in the Southern Ocean. However, preformed nutrient utilization in the BUS compensates with ~22-75 Tg C year -1 for 20-68% of estimated natural CO 2 outgassing in the Southern Ocean's Atlantic sector (~ 110 Tg C year -1 ), implying the need to better resolve global change impacts on the BUS to understand the ocean's role as future sink for anthropogenic CO 2 .
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • heavy metals
  • high glucose
  • climate change
  • diabetic rats
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • particulate matter
  • drinking water
  • oxidative stress
  • drug induced
  • carbon dioxide