Details of Oceanic concentrations and emissions toward atmosphere of carbon monoxide simulated by the PISCES biogeochemical model

Back

Dataset identification

Title of datasetOceanic concentrations and emissions toward atmosphere of carbon monoxide simulated by the PISCES biogeochemical model
Narrative summary of datasetThe ocean constitutes a minor source of atmospheric carbon monoxide (CO) at the global scale, but could play an important role far from continental anthropized emission zones. Here we use the NEMO-PISCES (Nucleus for European Modelling of the Ocean, Pelagic Interaction Scheme for Carbon and Ecosystem Studies) ocean general circulation and biogeochemistry model to dynamically assess the oceanic CO budget and its emission to the atmosphere at the global scale. The main bio-chemical sources and sinks of oceanic CO are explicitly represented in the model. The main processes driving the CO concentration are photoproduction and bacterial consumption and are estimated to 19.2 and 21.9?Tg?C?yr-1 respectively with our best-guess modelling setup. There are however very large uncertainties on their respective magnitude. Despite the scarcity of the in situ CO measurements in terms of spatio-temporal coverage, the proposed best simulation is able to represent most of the data (~?300 points) within a factor of two. Overall, the global emissions of CO to the atmosphere are 3.6?Tg?C?yr-1, in the range of recent estimates, but very different from the ones published by Erickson in 1989, which were the only gridded global emission available to date. These oceanic CO emission maps are relevant for use by atmospheric chemical models, especially to study the oxidizing capacity of the atmosphere above the remote ocean. Important Note: This submission has been initially submitted to SEA scieNtific Open data Edition (SEANOE) publication service and received the recorded DOI. The metadata elements have been further processed (refined) in EMODnet Ingestion Service in order to conform with the Data Submission Service specifications.
Summary of processing methodologyThe ocean constitutes a minor source of atmospheric carbon monoxide (CO) at the global scale, but could play an important role far from continental anthropized emission zones. Here we use the NEMO-PISCES (Nucleus for European Modelling of the Ocean, Pelagic Interaction Scheme for Carbon and Ecosystem Studies) ocean general circulation and biogeochemistry model to dynamically assess the oceanic CO budget and its emission to the atmosphere at the global scale. The main bio-chemical sources and sinks of oceanic CO are explicitly represented in the model. The main processes driving the CO concentration are photoproduction and bacterial consumption and are estimated to 19.2 and 21.9?Tg?C?yr-1 respectively with our best-guess modelling setup. There are however very large uncertainties on their respective magnitude. Despite the scarcity of the in situ CO measurements in terms of spatio-temporal coverage, the proposed best simulation is able to represent most of the data (~?300 points) within a factor of two. Overall, the global emissions of CO to the atmosphere are 3.6?Tg?C?yr-1, in the range of recent estimates, but very different from the ones published by Erickson in 1989, which were the only gridded global emission available to date. These oceanic CO emission maps are relevant for use by atmospheric chemical models, especially to study the oxidizing capacity of the atmosphere above the remote ocean.
Supporting documentationhttps://bg.copernicus.org/articles/16/881/2019/
Cruise
Start date2002-01-01
End date2019-12-31

Responsible organisations

CountryFrance
Organisation nameIfremer, Scientific Information Systems for the sea
Role of organisationDataset Holding Organisation
CountryFrance
Organisation nameSEA scieNtific Open data Edition
Role of organisationPublisher
How to citeConte Ludivine, Szopa Sophie, Séférian Roland, Bopp Laurent (2019). Oceanic concentrations and emissions toward atmosphere of carbon monoxide simulated by the PISCES biogeochemical model. SEANOE. https://doi.org/10.17882/59311 In addition to properly cite this dataset, it would be appreciated that the following work(s) be cited too, when using this dataset in a publication : Conte Ludivine, Szopa Sophie, Séférian Roland, Bopp Laurent (2019). The oceanic cycle of carbon monoxide and its emissions to the atmosphere. Biogeosciences, 16(4), 881-902. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-16-881-2019

Dataset availability

Original dataset download linkhttps://cloud.emodnet-ingestion.eu/index.php/s/cN3Wlydc2eufTKV
Dataset formatNetwork Common Data Form
Public accessNo limitations
License for useCC-BY 4.0
TypeDataset
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.17882/59311

Locations

Map
Latitude north boundary89
Longitude east boundary180
Latitude south boundary-89
Longitude west boundary-180
Sea areaWorld

Data types, collection and processing

Observation typePhytoplankton and microphytobenthos
Dissolved gases
Optical properties
Water column temperature and salinity
ParameterCarbon monoxide and dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere
Benthic primary production
Light absorption in the water column
Temperature of the water column
Data quality processing informationQuality controlled data

Process information

Submitting organisationCEA, Climate and Environmental Sciences Laboratory
Submission identifier (UUID)a53ad03f-3539-5393-3933-000000059311
Date of dataset creation2019-01-01
Date of dataset revision2019-11-12
Date of metadata creation2020-3-22
Date of metadata latest revision2021-11-29
Date of publishing2021-12-16
Processing data centreIfremer, Scientific Information Systems for the sea
Summary record-ID976