Ozone hole over Antarctica weakens carbon sink in Southern Ocean
December 10th, 2008 - 2:06 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )London, Dec 10 (ANI): A new research has suggested that the hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica may be impairing the Southern Oceans ability to mop up carbon dioxide (CO2) from Earths atmosphere.
Earths oceans are the largest sink of carbon dioxide, with the Southern Ocean accounting for more than 40 percent of the annual uptake of the greenhouse gas, Andrew Lenton, a marine biochemist at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris, told Nature News.
In theory, seas should soak up more carbon dioxide as levels of the gas in the atmosphere rise.
But, recent measurements have showed that the Southern Oceans surface waters have higher carbon levels than expected, which also makes them more acidic. As a result, the amount of CO2 that the ocean absorbs each year has also flattened out.
What was missing from the models, according to Lenton, was stratospheric ozone damage which, along with the climatic effects of greenhouse-gas emissions, is thought to be behind the observed strengthening of southern winds.
According to Lenton, these winds may be causing ocean currents that stir up carbon stored in the deep ocean and bring it up to the surface.
Lenton and his colleagues built Southern Ocean simulations that coupled the ozones effects on winds to ocean currents and marine carbon levels.
By running the models both with and without ozone depletion since 1975, the researchers isolated the signal from ozone depletion, said Lentons co-worker Francis Codron, an atmospheric scientist at the Dynamic Meteorology Laboratory in Paris.
Including the ozone hole reproduced the carbon sink that has observed by oceanographers.
These sound like very different parts of the system, and yet one affects the other, said Codron.
The signal from ozone, the researchers found, drove a drop in Southern Ocean surface pH of 0.01 units from 1994 to 2004 half the total pH decline in that period, and one-tenth of the change since the pre-industrial era.
Although the Antarctic ozone hole has stabilized in recent years and is expected to heal in the latter half of this century, climate models that don”t include its effects may show an overly optimistic future, said Lenton.
According to Julie Arblaster of the Bureau of Meteorology Research Centre in Melbourne, Australia, Understanding recent trends in the Southern Ocean carbon sink is key to understanding future projections of atmospheric CO2. (ANI)
- Ozone depletion reduces CO2 uptake of Southern Ocean - Aug 09, 2009
- Ozone hole responsible for saturation in Southern Ocean's CO2 absorption - Jun 27, 2009
- Earth's temperature 'depends on CO2 levels in atmosphere' - Oct 15, 2010
- Healing of ozone hole could aggravate global warming - Jan 26, 2010
- Bacterial chats limit carbon absorption by sea - Oct 13, 2011
- NASA spacecraft detects significant changes in Mars' atmosphere - Apr 22, 2011
- Ozone hole 'affecting climate change in Southern Hemisphere' - Apr 22, 2011
- CO2 negatively affecting environment of world's oceans - Feb 06, 2010
- Using Mother Nature's method to save oceans' marine life - Jan 20, 2011
- Scrubbing CO2 from air could be a long-term commitment - Jul 02, 2010
- Ocean acidification alters nitrogen cycling in world seas - Dec 21, 2010
- Aquatic "dead zones" increasing global warming - Mar 12, 2010
- Atmosphere still has self-cleansing capacity - Jan 11, 2011
- Ocean acidification intensifying: Study - Apr 23, 2010
- Ozone hole healing may increase climate warming - Jan 26, 2010
Tags: atmospheric scientist, carbon levels, climatic effects, deep ocean, greenhouse gas emissions, hole in the ozone, hole in the ozone layer, lenton, marie curie university, meteorology laboratory, ocean currents, ocean surface, ozone damage, ozone depletion, ozone hole, pierre and marie curie, southern ocean, southern oceans, southern winds, stratospheric ozone