Climate Change: 1997
Publications
Author:
Justic, D., Rabalais, N.N., and Turner, R.E.
Title: Impacts of climate change on net productivity
of coastal waters: implications for carbon budgets and
hypoxia.
Publication: Climate Research 8(3):225-237,
1997.
© Inter-Research.
Notes : General
circulation models predict that freshwater discharge from the
Mississippi River (USA) to the coastal ocean would increase 20 %
if atmospheric CO2 concentration doubles. Here we use a coupled
physical-biological 2-box model to investigate the potential
impacts of increased freshwater and nutrient inputs on the
production and decay of organic matter in the coastal waters of
the northern Gulf of Mexico. Model results for a doubled CO2
climate indicate that the annual net productivity of the upper
water column (NP, 0 to 10 m) is likely to increase by 65 g C m(-
2) yr(-1), relative to a 1985-1992 average (122 g C m(-2) yr(-
1)). Interestingly, this projected increase is of the same
magnitude as the one that has occurred since the 1940s due to the
introduction of anthropogenic nutrients. An increase in annual NP
of 32 g C m(-2) yr(-1) was observed during the Great Mississippi
River Flood of 1993, thus indicating the general validity of a
doubled CO2 scenario. The total oxygen uptake in the lower water
column (10 to 20 m), in contrast, is likely to remain at its
present value of about 200 g O-2 m(-2) yr(-1). Thus, carbon export
and burial, rather than in situ respiration, are likely to
be the dominant processes balancing coastal carbon budgets,
leading perhaps to an expanded extent of the hypoxic
zone.
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