Frontiers in Marine Science (Aug 2016)

Controls over Ocean Mesopelagic Interior Carbon Storage (COMICS): fieldwork, synthesis and modelling efforts

  • Richard John Sanders,
  • Stephanie Henson,
  • Adrian Martin,
  • Tom Anderson,
  • Raffaele Bernardello,
  • Peter Enderlein,
  • Sophie Fielding,
  • Sarah L. C Giering,
  • Manuela Hartmann,
  • Morten Iversen,
  • Samar Khatiwala,
  • Phyllis Lam,
  • Richard Lampitt,
  • Daniel Mayor,
  • Mark Moore,
  • Eugene Murphy,
  • Stuart Painter,
  • Alex James Poulton,
  • Kevin Saw,
  • Gabriele Stowasser,
  • Geraint Tarling,
  • Sinhue Torres-Valdes,
  • Mark Trimmer,
  • George Wolff,
  • Andrew Yool,
  • Mike Zubkov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2016.00136
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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The ocean’s biological carbon pump plays a central role in regulating atmospheric CO2 levels. In particular, the depth at which sinking organic carbon is broken down and respired in the mesopelagic zone is critical, with deeper remineralisation resulting in greater carbon storage. Until recently, however, a balanced budget of the supply and consumption of organic carbon in the mesopelagic had not been constructed in any region of the ocean, and the processes controlling organic carbon turnover are still poorly understood. Large-scale data syntheses suggest that a wide range of factors can influence remineralisation depth including upper-ocean ecological interactions, and interior dissolved oxygen concentration and temperature. However these analyses do not provide a mechanistic understanding of remineralisation, which increases the challenge of appropriately modelling the mesopelagic carbon dynamics. In light of this, the UK Natural Environment Research Council has funded a programme with this mechanistic understanding as its aim, drawing targeted fieldwork right through to implementation of a new parameterisation for mesopelagic remineralisation within an IPCC class global biogeochemical model. The Controls over Ocean Mesopelagic Interior Carbon Storage (COMICS) programme will deliver new insights into the processes of carbon cycling in the mesopelagic zone and how these influence ocean carbon storage. Here we outline the programme’s rationale, its goals, planned fieldwork and modelling activities, with the aim of stimulating international collaboration.

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