The size and control mechanism of the Southern Ocean’s carbon fluxes remain highly uncertain due to sparse winter observations. Here, we integrate satellite light detection and ranging (LIDAR) measurements with machine learning to assess the Southern Ocean air-sea CO2 fluxes between 2007 and 2020. We reveal that CO2 outgassing south of 50°S was underestimated by up to 40% in previous studies. While the midlatitude Southern Ocean (30° to 50°S) strengthens as a carbon sink, the high-latitude region (50° to 90°S) shows Southern Annular Mode (SAM)– modulated alternation between uptake and outgassing. The air-sea CO2 partial pressure difference (ΔpCO2) increasingly dominates flux variability over wind-driven transfer velocity. We propose a framework involving three latitudinal loops with differing pCO2 controls: (i) Antarctic (salinity/sea ice), (ii) polar front (atmospheric CO2/chlorophyll), and (iii) subpolar (sea surface temperature/CO2). The findings underscore the winter processes’ critical role and necessitate year-round observations to understand Southern Ocean’s global carbon cycle impact.

Substantially underestimated winter CO 2 sources of the Southern Ocean

Di Girolamo, Paolo;
2025-01-01

Abstract

The size and control mechanism of the Southern Ocean’s carbon fluxes remain highly uncertain due to sparse winter observations. Here, we integrate satellite light detection and ranging (LIDAR) measurements with machine learning to assess the Southern Ocean air-sea CO2 fluxes between 2007 and 2020. We reveal that CO2 outgassing south of 50°S was underestimated by up to 40% in previous studies. While the midlatitude Southern Ocean (30° to 50°S) strengthens as a carbon sink, the high-latitude region (50° to 90°S) shows Southern Annular Mode (SAM)– modulated alternation between uptake and outgassing. The air-sea CO2 partial pressure difference (ΔpCO2) increasingly dominates flux variability over wind-driven transfer velocity. We propose a framework involving three latitudinal loops with differing pCO2 controls: (i) Antarctic (salinity/sea ice), (ii) polar front (atmospheric CO2/chlorophyll), and (iii) subpolar (sea surface temperature/CO2). The findings underscore the winter processes’ critical role and necessitate year-round observations to understand Southern Ocean’s global carbon cycle impact.
2025
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11563/215238
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