Broecker and Peng's conjecture about the ocean's role in the
natural CO
cycle rests on one critical point. The North
Atlantic must currently be taking up an unusually large amount of
CO
in order to satisfy the CO
uptake demanded by both
the natural cycle and anthropogenic uptake. Since the North
Atlantic is not especially large in terms of area, the partial
pressures of CO
in North Atlantic surface waters must be
especially low in order to take up the required amount of carbon.
This should be easily measurable by current techniques.
A global compilation of the partial pressure of CO
(pCO
) in ocean surface waters by Taro Takahashi, one of the
Tans et al. (1990) authors, limits the CO
sink in the North
Atlantic to 0.53 GtC/yr. Because the North Pacific has no deep
water formation its capacity to take up carbon is small.
Takahashi's estimate for the North Pacific is only 0.06 GtC/yr.
This leaves a total northern hemisphere ocean sink of about 0.6
GtC/yr. Maintaining an interhemispheric CO
transport
consistent with 2 GtC/yr of ocean uptake requires a northern
hemisphere ocean sink more like 1.5 GtC/yr (Keeling et al., 1989).
This is clearly not supported by the observations on hand. The
limited ability of the North Atlantic to take up CO
is a
cornerstone of the Tans et al. argument.
The North Atlantic is particularly famous for its large spring
phytoplankton blooms which remove CO
from the water and draw
down the pCO
. The CO
uptake during spring blooms is
capable of pulling the oceanic pCO
well below atmospheric
levels and is strong enough to overcome the thermodynamic
relationship between pCO
and temperature (Watson et al.,
1991; Takahashi et al., 1993). Watson et al. suggest that
undersampling of North Atlantic spring blooms might significantly
change the North Atlantic carbon balance, but it is doubtful that
the effect of undersampling could be as large as 1 GtC/yr.
At the risk of confusing the reader, it is necessary to point out
some of the uncertainty surrounding the estimation of ocean-
atmosphere CO
fluxes by
pCO
. Converting an
ocean-atmosphere pCO
difference into a CO
flux requires
knowledge of the rate at which gasses are exchanged across the air-
sea interface. Ocean-atmosphere gas exchange rates are currently
uncertain by a factor of two (Wanninkhof, 1992). Tans et al.
(1990) combined gas exchange estimates with average ocean-
atmosphere pCO
differences over 6 latitude bands to determine
the ocean-atmosphere CO
flux as a function of latitude. The
Tans et al. compilation yields a total ocean uptake of 1.6 GtC/yr
which is skewed toward the 15-50
latitude band in the
southern hemisphere.
The Tans et al.
pCO
compilation puts the main
CO
sink in the 15-50
latitude band during southern
winter, a time of year for which very few observations were
available before 1990. Tans et al. ultimately chose to downplay
the poorly constrained
pCO
s from the southern
hemisphere and to focus on the better constrained
pCO
s from the North Atlantic. Subsequent work has
shown that this was a good strategy: poorly sampled areas of the
South Pacific and South Indian Oceans do not yield the large
CO
sink implied by the original
pCO
compilation. Murphy et al. (1991) showed that the western South
Pacific is a CO
sink, but the eastern South Pacific is a
CO
source. Similarly, work in the southern Indian Ocean
(Metzl et al., 1991) has shown that the areas of CO
uptake
are also negated by other areas of CO
source.