Ocean circulation and biogeochemistry moderate interannual and decadal surface water pH changes in the Sargasso Sea

Publication type

Journal Article

Research Area

Climate

Research Team

Marine Geochemistry

Abstract

The oceans absorb anthropogenic CO2 from the atmosphere, lowering surface ocean pH, a concern for calcifying marine organisms. The impact of ocean acidification is challenging to predict as each species appears to respond differently and because our knowledge of natural changes to ocean pH is limited in both time and space. Here we reconstruct 222 years of biennial seawater pH variability in the Sargasso Sea from a brain coral, Diploria labyrinthiformis. Using hydrographic data from the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study and the coral-derived pH record, we are able to differentiate pH changes due to surface temperature versus those from ocean circulation and biogeochemical changes. We find that ocean pH does not simply reflect atmospheric CO2 trends but rather that circulation/biogeochemical changes account for >90% of pH variability in the Sargasso Sea and more variability in the last century than would be predicted from anthropogenic uptake of CO2 alone.

Publication Details

Journal

Geophysical Research Letters

Volume

42

Issue

12

Pagination

4931-4939

Date Published

06/2015

Identifiers

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