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Fig 10
Same as Fig. : for wind stress (10−5 Pa/1025)
According to Eq. 3 K w variability is a result of changing sea ice cover and wind stress (Figs. 9 , 10 ).
Wind stress changes are part of the climate change especially in the southern hemisphere, where an enhancement of the wind speed and a shift of the storm tracks and the accompanying wind fields to the south are simulated (Fig. 10 ).
We assume that the reason for that is the decreased light supply due to increased cloud cover, which is accompanied by the poleward shift and intensification of the wind stress belt (Fig. 10 ) under climate change conditions.
In these areas, Kw changes are owing to the retreat of sea ice (Figs. 8 , 9 ), whereas between 30° and 60°S Kw mirrors the changes of the wind fields (Figs. 8 , 10 ).
This indicates that the effect of the wind stress does not dominate the changes in CO 2 uptake even in the SO, although in this area pronounced wind stress increases occur (Figs. 3 , 10 ).
by Crueger, T.; Roeckner, E.; Raddatz, T.; Schnur, R.; Wetzel, P.Journal: Climate Dynamics Vol. 31 Issue 2DOI: 10.1007/s00382-007-0342-xPublished: 2008-06-19Institution(s): Max Planck Institute for Meteorology
Abstract
The increase of atmospheric CO2 concentrations due to anthropogenic activities is substantially damped by the ocean, whose CO2 uptake is determined by the state of the ocean, which in turn is influenced by climate change. We investigate the mechanisms of the ocean’s carbon uptake within the feedback loop of atmospheric CO2 concentration, climate change and atmosphere/ocean CO2 flux. We evaluate two transient simulations from 1860 until 2100, performed with a version of the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM) with the carbon cycle included. In both experiments observed anthropogenic CO2 emissions were prescribed until 2000, followed by the emissions according to the IPCC Scenario A2. In one simulation the radiative forcing of changing atmospheric CO2 is taken into account (coupled), in the other it is suppressed (uncoupled). In both simulations, the oceanic carbon uptake increases from 1 GT C/year in 1960 to 4.5 GT C/year in 2070. Afterwards, this trend weakens in the coupled simulation, leading to a reduced uptake rate of 10% in 2100 compared to the uncoupled simulation. This includes a partial offset due to higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations in the coupled simulation owing to reduced carbon uptake by the terrestrial biosphere. The difference of the oceanic carbon uptake between both simulations is primarily due to partial pressure difference and secondary to solubility changes. These contributions are widely offset by changes of gas transfer velocity due to sea ice melting and wind changes. The major differences appear in the Southern Ocean (−45%) and in the North Atlantic (−30%), related to reduced vertical mixing and North Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, respectively. In the polar areas, sea ice melting induces additional CO2 uptake (+20%).
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