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Carbon dioxide sink in the Arctic Ocean from cross-shelf transport of dense Barents Sea water

Nature Geoscience 2022 30 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Andreas Rogge Claudia Wekerle, Cora Hörstmann, Vibe Schourup‐Kristensen, Andreas Rogge Cora Hörstmann, Emilia Trudnowska, Markus Janout, Claudia Wekerle, Emilia Trudnowska, Emilia Trudnowska, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Markus Janout, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Claudia Wekerle, Claudia Wekerle, Nadezhda Loginova, Emilia Trudnowska, Andreas Rogge Claudia Wekerle, Claudia Wekerle, Emilia Trudnowska, Claudia Wekerle, Emilia Trudnowska, Cora Hörstmann, Markus Janout, Cora Hörstmann, Anya M. Waite, Claudia Wekerle, Claudia Wekerle, Claudia Wekerle, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Cora Hörstmann, Anya M. Waite, Cora Hörstmann, Laurent Oziel, Laurent Oziel, Vibe Schourup‐Kristensen, Vibe Schourup‐Kristensen, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Claudia Wekerle, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Claudia Wekerle, Eugenio Ruiz‐Castillo, Eugenio Ruiz‐Castillo, Kirstin Schulz, Kirstin Schulz, Vasily V. Povazhnyy, Vasily V. Povazhnyy, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Vasily V. Povazhnyy, Vasily V. Povazhnyy, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Morten Hvitfeldt Iversen, Anya M. Waite, Anya M. Waite, Andreas Rogge Anya M. Waite, Andreas Rogge

Summary

Researchers identified a previously underappreciated carbon sink in the Arctic Ocean, finding that dense bottom water from the Barents Sea carries approximately 2,330 tonnes of carbon per day into the deep Nansen Basin, where it can be stored on millennial timescales.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Large amounts of atmospheric carbon can be exported and retained in the deep sea on millennial time scales, buffering global warming. However, while the Barents Sea is one of the most biologically productive areas of the Arctic Ocean, carbon retention times were thought to be short. Here we present observations, complemented by numerical model simulations, that revealed a deep and widespread lateral injection of approximately 2.33 kt C d −1 from the Barents Sea shelf to some 1,200 m of the Nansen Basin, driven by Barents Sea Bottom Water transport. With increasing distance from the outflow region, the plume expanded and penetrated into even deeper waters and the sediment. The seasonally fluctuating but continuous injection increases the carbon sequestration of the Barents Sea by 1/3 and feeds the deep sea community of the Nansen Basin. Our findings combined with those from other outflow regions of carbon-rich polar dense waters highlight the importance of lateral injection as a global carbon sink. Resolving uncertainties around negative feedbacks of global warming due to sea ice decline will necessitate observation of changes in bottom water formation and biological productivity at a resolution high enough to quantify future deep carbon injection.

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