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American Geophysical Union, Geophysical Research Letters, 12(40), p. 3091-3095

DOI: 10.1002/grl.50414

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Role of mode and intermediate waters in future ocean acidification: Analysis of CMIP5 models: MODE-INTERMEDIATE WATERS pH

Journal article published in 2013 by L. Resplandy, L. Bopp, J. C. Orr ORCID, J. P. Dunne
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

[1] Consistent with recent observations, Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5 Earth System Models project highest acidification rates in subsurface waters. Using seven Earth System Models, we find that high acidification rates in mode and intermediate waters (MIW) on centennial time scales (-0.0008 to -0.0023 +/- 0.0001yr(-1) depending on the scenario) are predominantly explained by the geochemical effect of increasing atmospheric CO2, whereas physical and biological climate change feedbacks explain less than 10% of the simulated changes. MIW are characterized by a larger surface area to volume ratio than deep and bottom waters leading to 5 to 10 times larger carbon uptake. In addition, MIW geochemical properties result in a sensitivity to increasing carbon concentration twice larger than surface waters (H+ of +1.2x10(-4)mmolm(-3) for every mmolm(-3) of dissolved carbon in MIW versus +0.6x10(-4) in surface waters). Low pH transported by mode and intermediate waters is likely to influence surface pH in upwelling regions decades after their isolation from the atmosphere.