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Observed APO Seasonal Cycles in the Pacific: Estimation of Autumn O2 Oceanic Emissions
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  • Yasunori Tohjima,
  • Tomoko Shirai,
  • Misa Ishizawa,
  • Hitoshi Mukai,
  • T. Machida,
  • Motoki Sasakawa,
  • Yukio Terao,
  • Kazuhiro Tsuboi,
  • Shintaro Takao,
  • Shin-ichiro Nakaoka
Yasunori Tohjima
National Institute for Environmental Studies

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Tomoko Shirai
National Institute for Environmental Studies
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Misa Ishizawa
University of Toronto
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Hitoshi Mukai
National Institute for Environmental Studies
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T. Machida
National Institute for Environmental St.
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Motoki Sasakawa
National Institute for Environmental Studies
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Yukio Terao
National Institute for Environmental Studies
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Kazuhiro Tsuboi
Meteorological Research Institute
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Shintaro Takao
National Institute for Environmental Studies
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Shin-ichiro Nakaoka
National Institute for Environmental Studies
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Abstract

In this work, we investigated the seasonal cycle of atmospheric potential oxygen (APO), a unique tracer of air-sea gas exchanges of molecular oxygen (O2) and carbon dioxide (CO2), expressed as APO = O2 + 1.1×CO2. APO data were obtained from flask air samples collected since late 1990s at three Japanese ground stations and on commercial cargo ships sailing between Japan and Australia/New Zealand, North America, and Southeast Asia. We also analyzed the APO spatial distribution and seasonal cycles with simulations from an atmospheric transport model, using climatological oceanic O2 fluxes from a previous study as input. Model simulations reproduced the observed APO seasonal cycles generally well, but with larger amplitudes and earlier occurrence of seasonal minima and maxima than in the observations. Moreover, the observed seasonal cycles exhibited larger APO enhancements than the simulations in autumn and early winter, especially in the northern North Pacific at 20°N-60°N. These enhancements remained when refining the comparison by adjusting the simulated APO peak-to-peak amplitudes and seasonal phases to the observations. This suggests additional O2 emissions in the North Pacific, not well expressed in the air-sea O2 fluxes used as input for our model simulations. The average autumn enhancement at 40°N-60°N was approximately twice that measured at 20°N-40°N. Confirming previous studies, our results indicate two distinct mechanisms possibly contributing to the additional oceanic O2 emissions: outgassing from a subsurface shallow oxygen maximum at 20°N-40°N and autumn phytoplankton bloom at 40°N-60°N.
14 May 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
15 May 2024Published in ESS Open Archive