The changing ocean and freshwater CO2 system

Ben I. McNeil, Katsumi Matsumoto

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

On a global scale, ocean carbon dioxide levels and therefore the rate of surface ocean acidification (lowering of pH) is generally set by how much anthropogenic CO2 humans emit to the atmosphere. Under human influence, the oceans will experience not just acidification but also warming, enhanced stratification, and deoxygenation. Under IPCC RCP8.5, a future greenhouse gas concentration trajectory that reflects very limited emission abatement, ocean CO2 levels are expected to reach as high as 900 μatm by the end of century, lowering surface average pH by about 0.4 units and amplifying the seasonality of surface PCO2 by up to 10-fold. However, on a local scale, the rate, magnitude, and variability of future acidification is not just a function of atmospheric CO2 levels, but how chemical, biological and physical processes in the ocean mediate the uptake of anthropogenic CO2. Such local processes can strongly modulate the overall long-term anthropogenic acidification from CO2 uptake. Key regions where local processes modulate ocean acidification include biologically productive waters, intense mixing/upwelling zones, regions of recent sea-ice melt and coastal oceans. Coastal regions in particular, with large biological productivity or eutrophication have been shown to accelerate the magnitude and onset of anthropogenic ocean acidification on the regional scale. For inland freshwater systems (lakes and rivers), although data are sparse, CO2 is generally supersaturated and subject to large variability via unique local conditions (e.g., runoff, eutrophication, local pollution etc.), implying that local processes will dominate the CO2 conditions in the future. The large variability makes detection of acidification in inland waters a challenge. Understanding how local conditions and processes modulate the long-term rate of anthropogenic acidification will be important in order to predict the likely levels of CO2 exposure that aquatic organisms will encounter in the future.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationCarbon Dioxide
EditorsMartin Grosell, Philip L. Munday, Anthony P. Farrell, Colin J. Brauner
PublisherElsevier Inc.
Pages1-32
Number of pages32
ISBN (Print)9780128176092
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Publication series

NameFish Physiology
Volume37
ISSN (Print)1546-5098

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Inc.

Keywords

  • Aquatic biogeochemistry
  • Carbon cycle
  • Hypercapnia
  • Ocean acidification

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The changing ocean and freshwater CO2 system'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this