scholarly journals Role of the deep ocean in forming of the global warming slowdown

Author(s):  
R V Bekryaev
Keyword(s):  
2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 177-205
Author(s):  
K. Fennel

Abstract. Continental shelves play a key role in the cycling of nitrogen and carbon. Here the physical transport and biogeochemical transformation processes affecting the fluxes into and out of continental shelf systems are reviewed, and their role in the global cycling of both elements is discussed. Uncertainties in observation-based estimates of nitrogen and carbon fluxes mostly result from uncertainties in the shelf-open ocean exchange of organic and inorganic matter, which is hard to quantify based on observations alone, but can be inferred from biogeochemical models. Model-based nitrogen and carbon budgets are presented for the Northwestern North Atlantic continental shelf. Results indicate that shelves are an important sink for fixed nitrogen and a source of alkalinity, but are not much more efficient in exporting organic carbon to the deep ocean than the adjacent open ocean for the shelf region considered.


2008 ◽  
Vol 07 (03) ◽  
pp. C06 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward Morris ◽  
Susannah Sayler

In January 2006, my wife Susannah Sayler and I set out to photograph landscapes around the world that were being transformed by global warming. We called our work The Canary Project. From the beginning, as now, we had both activist aims and artistic ambitions. These two types of motivation overlap in places and in other places feel completely distinct. In general, we feel as though are carrying forward a torch that science cannot carry any further. Following are some thoughts on our role as activists and as artists and as collaborators with the scientific community.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deepika Pandey

The flow of water in rivers is of paramount importance to maintain supply of food and energy requirements to a great extent. The minimum flow in perennial rivers is subjected to groundwater availability, it is further replenished by the water added through precipitation. Climate change not only increases the melting of glaciers and sea level rise, but also influences the surface water flow and quality. As agriculture is directly affected by changing precipitation pattern, the reduction in water resources and untimely addition of water, both act havoc to the food production process. This interconnection makes agriculture even more vulnerable to the scenarios of global warming and climate change. Studies on food-energy-water nexus has opened new avenues of research in sustainable water management. The role of sustainable flow of water in rivers is highlighted which needs to be understood in era of climate change.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Kehan Li

Climate change is of great importance in modern times and global warming is considered as a significant part of climate change. It is proved that human’s emissions such as greenhouse gases are one of the main sources of global warming (IPCC, 2018). Apart from greenhouse gases, there is another kind of matter being released in quantity via emissions from industries and transportations and playing an important role in global warming, which is aerosol. However, atmospheric aerosols have the net effect of cooling towards global warming. In this paper, climate change with respect to global warming is briefly introduced and the role of aerosols in the atmosphere is emphasized. Besides, properties of aerosols including dynamics and thermodynamics of aerosols as well as interactions with solar radiation are concluded. In the end, environmental policies and solutions are discussed. Keywords: Climate change, Global warming, Atmospheric aerosols, Particulate matter, Radiation, Environmental policy.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (7) ◽  
pp. 936-950 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer R. Marlon ◽  
Sander van der Linden ◽  
Peter D. Howe ◽  
Anthony Leiserowitz ◽  
S. H. Lucia Woo ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederic Le Moigne

<p>The oceanic biological carbon pump (BCP) regulates the Earth carbon cycle by transporting part of the photosynthetically fixed CO<sub>2</sub> into the deep ocean. Suppressing this mechanism would result in an important increase of atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> level. The BCP occurs mainly in the form of organic carbon particles (POC) sinking out the surface ocean. Various types of particles are produced in surface ocean. They all differ in production, sinking and decomposition rates, vertically and horizontally. The amount of POC transported to depths via these various export pathways as well as their decomposition pathways all have different ecological origins and therefore may response differently to climate change. Here I will briefly review some of the processes driving both particle export out of the euphotic zone (0-100m) as well as particles transport within the mesopelagic zone (100-1000m). In the early 2000s, strong correlations between POC and mineral (calcite an opal) fluxes observed in the deep ocean have inspired the inclusion of “ballast effect” parameterizations in carbon cycle models. These relationships were first considered as being universal. However global analysis of POC and mineral ballast fluxes showed that mineral ballasting is important in regions like the high-latitude North Atlantic but that in most places (some of which efficiently exporting) the unballasted fraction often dominates the export flux. In such regions, we later showed that zooplankton-mediated export (presence of faecal pellets) and surface microbial abundance were important drivers of the efficiency of particles export. Similar trends were found globally by including bacteria and zooplankton abundances to a global reanalysis of the global variations of the POC export efficiency. This implies that the whole ecosystem structure from bacteria to fishes, rather than just the phytoplankton community, is important in setting the strength of the biological carbon pump. Further down in the water column (mesopelagic zone), processes impacting the transport of particles are less clear. Sinking particles experience a number of biotic and abiotic transformations during their descent. These includes solubilization, remineralisation, fragmentation, ingestion/active transport, breakdown among others. While some potential factors such as O<sub>2</sub> concentration and temperature have been proposed as powerful controls, global evidences are often inconsistent. In the award talk, I will review current challenges related to the role of particles consumption by zooplankton and fishes as well as the role of particles attached prokaryotes (bacteria and archaea) in setting the efficiency of the carbon transport in the mesopelagic zone.</p>


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