In
oceanic biogeochemistry, the
continental shelf pump is proposed to operate in the shallow waters of the
continental shelves, acting as a mechanism to transport
carbon (as either dissolved or particulate material) from surface waters to the interior of the adjacent deep ocean.
Overview
Originally formulated by Tsunogai
et al. (1999), the pump is believed to occur where the
solubility and
biological pumps interact with a local
hydrography that feeds dense water from the shelf floor into sub-surface (at least
subthermocline) waters in the neighbouring deep ocean. Tsunogai
et al.'s (1999) original work focused on the
East China Sea, and the observation that, averaged over the year, its surface waters represented a sink for
carbon dioxide. This observation was combined with others of the distribution of dissolved
carbonate and
alkalinity and explained as follows :
- the shallowness of the continental shelf restricts convection of cooling water
- as a consequence, cooling is greater for continental shelf waters than for neighbouring open ocean waters
- this leads to the production of relatively cool and dense water on the shelf
- the cooler waters promote the solubility pump and lead to an increased storage of dissolved inorganic carbon
- this extra carbon storage is augmented by the increased biological production characteristic of shelves
- the dense, carbon-rich shelf waters sink to the shelf floor and enter the sub-surface layer of the open ocean via isopycnal mixing
Significance
Based on their measurements of the CO
2 flux over the East China Sea (35 g C m
-2 y
-1), Tsunogai
et al. (1999) estimated that the continental shelf pump could be responsible for an air-to-sea flux of approximately 1 Gt C y
-1 over the world's shelf areas. Given that observational and modelling of anthropogenic emissions of CO
2 estimates suggest that the ocean is currently responsible for the uptake of approximately 2 Gt C y
-1, and that these estimates are poor for the shelf regions, the continental shelf pump may play an important role in the ocean's
carbon cycle.
One caveat to this calculation is that the original work was concerned with the hydrography of the East China Sea, where cooling plays the dominant role in the formation of dense shelf water, and that this mechanism may not apply in other regions. However, it has been suggested that other processes may drive the pump under different climatic conditions. For instance, in polar regions, the formation of sea-ice results in the extrusion of salt that may increase seawater density. Similarly, in tropical regions, evaporation may increase local salinity and seawater density.
The strong sink of CO2 at temperate latitudes reported by Tsunogai et al. (1999) was later confirmed in the Gulf of Biscay, the Middle Atlantic Bight and the North Sea. On the other hand, in the sub-tropical South Atlantic Bight reported a source of CO2 to the atmosphere.
Recently, work has compiled and scaled available data on CO2 fluxes in coastal environments, and shown that globally marginal seas act as a significant CO2 sink (-1.6 mol C m-2 y-1; -0.45 Gt C y-1) in agreement with previous estimates. However, the global sink of CO2 in marginal seas could be almost fully compensated by the emission of CO2 (+11.1 mol C m-2 y-1; +0.40 Gt C y-1) from the ensemble of near-shore coastal ecosystems, mostly related to the emission of CO2 from estuaries (0.34 Gt C y-1).
References
See also