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Processes governing the carbon chemistry during the SAGE experiment
Authors:KI Currie  B MacaskillMR Reid  CS Law
Institution:a National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Dunedin, New Zealand
b National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Hamilton, New Zealand
c Department of Chemistry, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
d National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand
Abstract:Measurements of pCO2, pH and alkalinity in the surface waters of an iron fertilised patch of sub-Antarctic water were made during SAGE (SOLAS SAGE: Surface-Ocean Lower Atmosphere Studies Air-Sea Gas Experiment). The iron addition induced a minor phytoplankton bloom, however the patch dynamics were dominated by physical processes which suppressed and masked the biological effects. The Lagrangian nature of the experiment allowed the carbonate chemistry in the patch to be followed for 15.5 days, and the relative importance of the biological and physical factors influencing the surface water pCO2 was estimated. The pCO2 of the surface waters of the patch increased from 327 ??atm prior to iron addition to 338 ??atm on Day 14, effects of vertical and horizontal mixing offset the 15 ??atm drawdown that would have occurred had the induced biological uptake been the sole factor to influence the pCO2. The air-sea carbon flux calculated using the measured skin temperature and a piston velocity parameterisation determined during SAGE (Ho et al., 2006) was 98.5% of the flux determined using conventional bulk temperature measurement and the Wanninkhof (1992) piston velocity parameterisation. The skin temperature alone contributed to an 8% increase in the flux compared with that determined using bulk temperature.
Keywords:CO2  Air-sea flux  Skin temperature  Sub-Antarctic surface water  Iron addition experiment
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