Coastal metabolism and the oceanic organic carbon balance
作者:
S. V. Smith,
J. T. Hollibaugh,
期刊:
Reviews of Geophysics
(WILEY Available online 1993)
卷期:
Volume 31,
issue 1
页码: 75-89
ISSN:8755-1209
年代: 1993
DOI:10.1029/92RG02584
数据来源: WILEY
摘要:
Net organic metabolism (that is, the difference between primary production and respiration of organic matter) in the coastal ocean may be a significant term in the oceanic carbon budget. Historical change in the rate of this net metabolism determines the importance of the coastal ocean relative to anthropogenic perturbations of the global carbon cycle. Consideration of long‐term rates of river loading of organic carbon, organic burial, chemical reactivity of land‐derived organic matter, and rates of community metabolism in the coastal zone leads us to estimate that the coastal zone oxidizes about 7 × 1012moles C/yr. The open ocean is apparently also a site of net organic oxidation (∼16 × 1012moles C/yr). Thus organic metabolism in the ocean appears to be a source of CO2release to the atmosphere rather than being a sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide. The small area of the coastal ocean accounts for about 30% of the net oceanic oxidation. Oxidation in the coastal zone (especially in bays and estuaries) takes on particular importance, because the input rate is likely to have been altered substantially by human activities
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