The carbon sink of the Coral Sea, the world's second largest marginal sea, weakened during 2006-2018.

Sci Total Environ

State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China; State Key Laboratory of Satellite Ocean Environment Dynamics, Second Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources, Hangzhou, China.

Published: May 2023

The latest reports show that the ocean absorbs approximately 26 % of anthropogenic CO and that the carbon sink of the global ocean (air-sea CO flux) is continually increasing, while variations in different marginal seas are complicated. The Coral Sea, the second largest marginal sea in the world, is characterized by a generally oligotrophic basin and borders the biodiversity hotspot of Great Barrier Reef. In this study, we proposed a semianalytical method and reconstructed the first high-resolution satellite-based pCO and air-sea CO flux dataset from 2006 to 2018 for the Coral Sea. This dataset performed well in the basin (RMSE<10 μatm, R > 0.72) and coral reef areas (RMSE<12 μatm, R > 0.8) based on validation by a massive independent dataset. We found that sea surface pCO is increasing (1.8 to 2.7 μatm/year) under the forcing of increasing atmospheric CO, and the pCO growth rate in water is faster than that in the atmosphere. The combination of increasing sea surface pCO, high pCO seawater from coral reef areas, and the low depletion capacity of the oligotrophic basin led to a gradual weakening of the carbon sink in the Coral Sea, with the 2016 carbon sink being 52 % of that in 2006. This weakening was more pronounced after strong El Niño events (e.g., 2007, 2010, and 2016), with the corresponding high SST and low wind speed further weakening the carbon sink. This understanding of the long-term change in the Coral Sea provides new insight on the carbonate system variation and carbon sink capacity evolution in seawater under increasing atmospheric CO.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162219DOI Listing

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