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  3. Ocean Biogeochemistry in GFDL’s Earth System Model 4.1 and its Response to Increasing Atmospheric CO2
 

Ocean Biogeochemistry in GFDL’s Earth System Model 4.1 and its Response to Increasing Atmospheric CO2

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/153159
Publisher DOI
10.1029/2019MS002043
Description
This contribution describes the ocean biogeochemical component of the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory's Earth System Model 4.1 (GFDL‐ESM4.1), assesses GFDL‐ESM4.1's capacity to capture observed ocean biogeochemical patterns, and documents its response to increasing atmospheric CO2. Notable differences relative to the previous generation ofGFDL ESM's include enhanced resolution of plankton food web dynamics, refined particle remineralization, and a larger number of exchanges of nutrients across Earth system components. During model spin‐up, the carbon drift rapidly fell below the 10 Pg C per century equilibration criterion established by the Coupled Climate‐Carbon Cycle Model Intercomparison Project (C4MIP). Simulations robustly captured large‐scale observed nutrient distributions, plankton dynamics, and characteristics of the biological pump. The model overexpressed phosphate limitation and open ocean hypoxia in some areas but still yielded realistic surface and deep carbon system properties, including cumulative carbon uptake since preindustrial times and over the last decades that is consistent with observation‐based estimates. The model's response to the direct and radiative effects of a 200% atmospheric CO2 increase from preindustrial conditions (i.e., years 101–120 of a 1% CO2 yr−1 simulation) included (a) a weakened, shoaling organic carbon pump leading to a 38% reduction in the sinking flux at 2,000 m; (b) a two‐thirds reduction in the calcium carbonate pump that nonetheless generated only weak calcite compensation on century time‐scales; and, in contrast to previous GFDL ESMs, (c) a moderate reduction in global net primary production that was amplified at higher trophic levels. We conclude with a discussion of model limitations and priority developments.
Date of Publication
2020-08-22
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
500 Science > 530 Physics
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Stock, Charles A.
Dunne, John P.
Fan, Songmiao
Ginoux, Paul
John, Jasmin G.
Krasting, John P.
Laufkötter, Charlotteorcid-logo
Physikalisches Institut, Klima- und Umweltphysik (KUP)
Paulot, Fabian
Zadeh, Niki
Additional Credits
Physikalisches Institut, Klima- und Umweltphysik (KUP)
Series
Journal of advances in modeling earth systems : JAMES
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
ISSN
1942-2466
Access(Rights)
open.access
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