The Impact of Orbital Precession on Air-Sea CO$_{2}$ Exchange in
the Southern Ocean
Abstract
Orbital precession has been linked to glacial cycles and the atmospheric
carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration, yet the direct impact of precession
on the carbon cycle is not well understood. We analyze output from an
Earth system model configured under different orbital parameters to
isolate the impact of precession on air-sea CO2 flux in the Southern
Ocean – a component of the global carbon cycle that is thought to play
a key role on past atmospheric CO2 variations. Here, we demonstrate that
periods of high precession are coincident with anomalous CO2 outgassing
from the Southern Ocean. Under high precession, we find a poleward shift
in the southern westerly winds, enhanced Southern Ocean meridional
overturning, and an increase in the surface ocean partial pressure of
CO2 along the core of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. These results
suggest that orbital precession may have played an important role in
driving changes in atmospheric CO2