Frontiers in Marine Science (May 2023)

Controlling factor analysis of oceanic surface pCO2 in the South China Sea using a three-dimensional high-resolution biogeochemical model

  • Miaoyin Zhang,
  • Miaoyin Zhang,
  • Xueming Zhu,
  • Xuanliang Ji,
  • Anmin Zhang,
  • Jingjing Zheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1155979
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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The oceanic surface pressure of CO2 (pCO2) is an essential parameter for understanding the global and regional carbon cycle and the oceanic carbon uptake capacity. We constructed a three-dimensional physical-biogeochemical model with a high resolution of 1/30° for the South China Sea (SCS) to compensate for the limited temporal coverage and limited spatial resolution of the observations and numerical models. The model simulated oceanic surface pCO2 from 1992 to 2021, and the empirical orthogonal function analysis (EOF) of the model results is conducted for a better understanding of the seasonal and interannual variations of oceanic surface pCO2 in this region. The model results showed that the SCS serves as an atmospheric CO2 source from March to October and a sink from November to February, with a domain-averaged climatological oceanic surface pCO2 value that varies between 357 and 408 μatm, and the temporal variation was positively correlated with the variation of sea surface temperature (SST). The majority of the SCS showed a long-term increasing trend for oceanic surface pCO2 with a value of (1.19±0.60) μatm/a, which is in response to the continuously rising atmospheric CO2 concentration. The first EOF mode is positively correlated with the Niño 3 index with a correlation coefficient of 0.51 when the Niño 3 leads 5 months, and the second EOF mode is correlated with the PDO index when the PDO leads 7 months, which suggests an influence of climate variability on the carbonate system. Moreover, it was found that the long-term trend rate of oceanic surface pCO2 was mainly controlled by total CO2 (TCO2) through the decomposition of influence factors, and SST variation took a dominant role in seasonal variations of pCO2. With rapid global warming and continuous release of CO2, the carbonate system in the SCS may change leading to calcite and aragonite saturation.

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