1371 / 2024-09-25 19:45:03
Changes of ventilation in the North Atlantic over the past three decades - a climate change signal
ocean ventilation,climate change,ocean deoxygenation,AMOC
摘要待审
Guo Haichao / GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Koeve Wolfgang / GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Kriest Iris / GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Frenger Ivy / GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Tanhua Toste / GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Brandt Peter / Kiel University;GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
He Yanchun / Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center, Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Bergen, Norway
Xue Tianfei / GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Oschlies Andreas / Kiel University;GEOMAR - Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
The meridional overturning circulation in the North Atlantic supplies oxygen to a large part of the world ocean's interior via the formation of mode waters and North Atlantic Deep Water as part of the global thermohaline overturning circulation. Whether human activities have altered this ventilation system remains uncertain. To assess the temporal changes of ocean ventilation in the North Atlantic, we calculated the "age" of seawaters, that is the duration since its last contact with the ocean surface, from both observed and climate models simulated chlorofluorocarbon-12 and sulfur hexafluoride concentrations. Results suggest enhanced ventilation in the intermediate waters and slowed-down ventilation in the deep waters over the past three decades. We propose such ventilation change is a climate change signal because (i) observed ventilation evolution pattern, although likely influenced by the major driver of natural variability in the region, the North Atlantic Oscillation, consistently emerges in historical simulations across different Earth System models, each representing different states of natural climate variability,  (ii) the pattern intensifies with ongoing climate change in model projections under a high-emission scenario, indicating it is an anthropogenically forced signal, and (iii) observed and simulated ventilation changes in the North Atlantic seem to be part of a broader global trend, with enhanced upper-ocean ventilation, and slowed deep-ocean ventilation also in other ocean basins. Such ventilation change is supposed to continue for several hundred years, and if there is no biogeochemical feedback, deep ocean deoxygenation is committed to continue in the coming centuries. 

 
重要日期
  • 会议日期

    01月14日

    2025

    01月17日

    2025

  • 09月27日 2024

    初稿截稿日期

  • 12月14日 2024

    注册截止日期

主办单位
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University
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