TY - JOUR
T1 - How well do global ocean biogeochemistry models simulate dissolved iron distributions?
AU - Tagliabue, Alessandro
AU - Aumont, Olivier
AU - Death, Ros
AU - Dunne, John P.
AU - Dutkiewicz, Stephanie
AU - Galbraith, Eric
AU - Misumi, Kazuhiro
AU - Moore, J. Keith
AU - Ridgwell, Andy
AU - Sherman, Elliot
AU - Stock, Charles
AU - Vichi, Marcello
AU - Völker, Christoph
AU - Yool, Andrew
PY - 2016/2/1
Y1 - 2016/2/1
N2 - ©2015. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. Numerical models of ocean biogeochemistry are relied upon to make projections about the impact of climate change on marine resources and test hypotheses regarding the drivers of past changes in climate and ecosystems. In large areas of the ocean, iron availability regulates the functioning of marine ecosystems and hence the ocean carbon cycle. Accordingly, our ability to quantify the drivers and impacts of fluctuations in ocean ecosystems and carbon cycling in space and time relies on first achieving an appropriate representation of the modern marine iron cycle in models. When the iron distributions from 13 global ocean biogeochemistry models are compared against the latest oceanic sections from the GEOTRACES program, we find that all models struggle to reproduce many aspects of the observed spatial patterns. Models that reflect the emerging evidence for multiple iron sources or subtleties of its internal cycling perform much better in capturing observed features than their simpler contemporaries, particularly in the ocean interior. We show that the substantial uncertainty in the input fluxes of iron results in a very wide range of residence times across models, which has implications for the response of ecosystems and global carbon cycling to perturbations. Given this large uncertainty, iron fertilization experiments based on any single current generation model should be interpreted with caution. Improvements to how such models represent iron scavenging and also biological cycling are needed to raise confidence in their projections of global biogeochemical change in the ocean.
AB - ©2015. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. Numerical models of ocean biogeochemistry are relied upon to make projections about the impact of climate change on marine resources and test hypotheses regarding the drivers of past changes in climate and ecosystems. In large areas of the ocean, iron availability regulates the functioning of marine ecosystems and hence the ocean carbon cycle. Accordingly, our ability to quantify the drivers and impacts of fluctuations in ocean ecosystems and carbon cycling in space and time relies on first achieving an appropriate representation of the modern marine iron cycle in models. When the iron distributions from 13 global ocean biogeochemistry models are compared against the latest oceanic sections from the GEOTRACES program, we find that all models struggle to reproduce many aspects of the observed spatial patterns. Models that reflect the emerging evidence for multiple iron sources or subtleties of its internal cycling perform much better in capturing observed features than their simpler contemporaries, particularly in the ocean interior. We show that the substantial uncertainty in the input fluxes of iron results in a very wide range of residence times across models, which has implications for the response of ecosystems and global carbon cycling to perturbations. Given this large uncertainty, iron fertilization experiments based on any single current generation model should be interpreted with caution. Improvements to how such models represent iron scavenging and also biological cycling are needed to raise confidence in their projections of global biogeochemical change in the ocean.
KW - biogeochemistry
KW - climate
KW - iron
KW - model
KW - ocean
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84956875158
U2 - 10.1002/2015GB005289
DO - 10.1002/2015GB005289
M3 - Article
SN - 0886-6236
VL - 30
SP - 149
EP - 174
JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
IS - 2
ER -