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Fall AGU Meeting (Dec. 2002) COAST abstracts:COAST overview (Barth)
Abstracts should be cited as:
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OS61D-03 Upwelling Along the Oregon Coast is a Sink for Atmospheric CO2 B Hales, T Takahashi, L Bandstra, and P Covert High-resolution cross-shelf sections of nutrient and PCO2 measurements made during May and August of 2001 off the Oregon Coast show the effects of strong upwelling of nutrient-and CO2- rich water, followed by rapid uptake of these chemicals by biological productivity. Photosynthetic production draws nitrate from over 30 micro mol/kg to undetectable levels; along with this nitrate uptake, PCO2 is drawn down from values of 300 micro atm above, to 200 micro atm below, atmospheric saturation. High PCO2 surface waters are confined to a narrow region near the coast; low PCO2 conditions persist seaward over areas covering most of the shelf. If these conditions are representative of other upwelling areas in the Eastern North Pacific over the duration of the upwelling season, CO2 transfer into such waters may represent a significant contribution to the total summer-time uptake of CO2 by the entire North Pacific. This phenomenon makes the Oregon Coast unique among upwelling regions of the world oceans, which are typically sources of CO2 to the atmosphere. Three factors appear to contribute to this singularity: 1) Upwelled source waters have high preformed nitrate relative to total CO2 (TCO2), which allows for the necessarily high alkalinity:TCO2 ratios implied by the observed low PCO2; 2) Productivity is able to rapidly consume all upwelled nitrate, along with a stoichiometric proportion of TCO2; and 3) upwelled waters are only moderately warmed in comparison to lower-latitude upwelling regions. |