IOC-R: A vision of Coordinated Ocean Carbon Research and Observations
for the Next Decade
Abstract
Significant advancements have been made over the past four decades in
understanding and quantifying the stocks and flows of carbon between the
reservoirs. However, knowledge of the complex oceanic processes
influencing the carbon cycle has been largely compartmentalized into
physico-chemical and biological studies. The connections between coastal
and open-ocean carbon processes have also been understudied. To fully
appreciate the ocean carbon cycle, and its anticipated changes in the
future, a holistic and integrated approach to ocean carbon cycle
research is needed. In particular, a greater quantitative understanding
of how biological processes interact with the physical and chemical
drivers in the open ocean and in coastal waters is needed. Moreover, the
carbon cycle needs to be understood in the current socio-economic
context and large anticipated changes in the next decades. To address
these issues, the Integrated Ocean Carbon Research (IOC-R), a formal IOC
working group, was formed in 2018. The working group is a response to
the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development 2021-2030,
“the Decade”. The IOC-R will contribute to the science elements of an
overarching Implementation Plan for the Decade. The Implementation Plan
is a high-level framework to guide actions by which ocean science can
more effectively deliver its contribution to achieving the societal
outcomes outlined for the Decade. The IOC-R focusses the ocean carbon
cycle component of the Implementation Plan by addressing key issues in
ocean carbon research through a combined strategy of research and
observational goals. The research will be framed by four key questions
that were formulated at the inaugural Expert Workshop on Integrated
Ocean Carbon Research at the IOC-UNESCO Headquarters in Paris, France on
Oct. 28-30, 2019: 1) Will the ocean uptake of anthropogenic carbon
dioxide (CO2) continue as primarily an abiotic process?
2) What is the role of biology in the ocean carbon cycle? 3) What are
the exchanges of carbon between the land-ocean continuum and how are
they evolving over time? 4) How are humans altering the ocean carbon
cycle, and what are the feedbacks?