Global estimates of particulate organic carbon from the surface ocean to
the base of the mesopelagic
Abstract
The gravitational settling of organic particles from the surface to the
deep ocean is an important export pathway and one of the largest
components of the marine biological carbon pump (BCP). The strength and
efficiency of the gravitational pump is often measured using metrics
reliant on reference depths and empirical formulations that parameterize
the relationship between depth and flux or concentration. Here, BGC-Argo
profiles were used to identify the isolume where POC concentration
starts to decline, revealing attenuation trends below this isolume that
are remarkably consistent across the global ocean. We developed a
semi-mechanistic approach that uses observations from the first optical
depth to predict POC concentration from the surface ocean to the base of
the mesopelagic (1000 m), allowing assessments of spatial and temporal
variability in BCP efficiencies. We find that rates of POC attenuation
are high in areas of high biomass and low in areas of low biomass,
supporting the view that bloom events sometimes result in a relatively
weak deep biological pump characterized by low transfer efficiency to
the base of the mesopelagic. Our isolume-based attenuation model was
applied to satellite data to yield the first remote sensing-based
estimate of integrated global POC stock of 3.02 Pg C for the upper 1000
m, with 1.27 Pg C of this global carbon stock located above the
reference isolume where POC begins to attenuate.