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Replaying the tape of history: Synthetic large ensembles of sea-air carbon dioxide (CO2) flux
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  • Holly Olivarez,
  • Nicole Lovenduski,
  • Riley Brady,
  • Amanda Fay,
  • Marion Gehlen,
  • Luke Gregor,
  • Peter Landschützer,
  • Karen McKinnon,
  • DAVID MUNRO
Holly Olivarez
University of Colorado Boulder

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Nicole Lovenduski
University of Colorado Boulder
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Riley Brady
University of Colorado Boulder
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Amanda Fay
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University
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Marion Gehlen
Laboratoire des sciences du climat et de l'environnement
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Luke Gregor
ETH Zürich Institute for Operations Research
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Peter Landschützer
Universität Hamburg,Max Planck Institute for Meteorology,University of East Anglia
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Karen McKinnon
University of California, Los Angeles
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DAVID MUNRO
University of Colorado Boulder
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Abstract

We use a statistical emulation technique to construct synthetic ensembles of global and regional sea-air carbon dioxide (CO2) flux from four observation-based products over 1985-2014. Much like ensembles of Earth system models that are constructed by perturbing their initial conditions, our synthetic ensemble members exhibit different phasing of internal variability and a common externally forced signal. Our synthetic ensembles illustrate an important role for internal variability in the temporal evolution of global and regional CO2 flux and produce a wide range of possible trends over 1990-1999 and 2000-2009. We assume a specific externally forced signal and calculate the likelihood of the observed trend given the distribution of synthetic trends during these two periods. Over the decade 1990-1999, three of the four observation-based products exhibit small negative trends in globally integrated sea-air CO2 flux (i.e., enhanced ocean CO2 absorption with time) that are highly probable (44-72% chance of occurrence) in their respective synthetic trend distributions. Over the decade 2000-2009, however, three of the four products show large negative trends in globally integrated sea-air CO2 flux that are somewhat improbable (17-19% chance of occurrence). Our synthetic ensembles suggest that the largest observation-based positive trends in global and Southern Ocean CO2 flux over 1990-1999 and the largest negative trends over 2000-2009 are somewhat improbable (<30% chance of occurrence). Our approach provides a new understanding of the role of internal and external processes in driving sea-air CO2 flux variability.