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ATM
S 211, Spring Quarter 2001
Climate and Climate Change |
Notes
for the lectures on Wednesday Oct. 31 and Thursday Nov. 1
The Carbon Cycle |
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The carbon
cycle describes the exchange of carbon atoms between various reservoirs
within the earth system. The carbon cycle is one of a number of geochemical
cycles and since it involves the biosphere it is sometimes referred to
as a bio-geochemical cycle. Other biogeochemical cycles involve oxygen,
nitrogen and sulfur.
Why study the carbon cycle?
All three of these cycles are linked together
as part of the global carbon cycle, but we examine them separately because
they control atmospheric levels of CO2 on different timescales
ranging from months (short term organic carbon cycle), to tens of millions
of years (long term inorganic carbon cycle). Dividing the carbon
cycle in these individual pieces help us represent this system in simple
terms.
The short term organic
carbon cycle
CO2 + H2O --> CH2O + O2 The respiration (and decay) (p. 133) reaction undoes the work of photosynthesis, thereby returning carbon atoms to the atmosphere: CH2O + O2 --> CO2 + H2O In contrast to photosynthesis, respiration and decay involve a release of energy. The terrestrial biosphere is much more massive than the marine biosphere, largely because of the presence of trees. Soils also contain a large amount of organic material. The influence of the land biosphere is evident in Fig. 7-4. Each year during the Northern Hemisphere growing season (spring and summer) atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations decrease by ~5 parts per million as carbon is incorporated into leafy plants. From October through January, when photosynthesis is largely confined to the tropics and the relatively small Southern Hemisphere continents, the respiration and decay reaction dominates and atmospheric carbon dioxide increases with time. The marine biosphere operates like a 'biological pump'. In the sunlit uppermost 100 meters of the ocean, photosynthesis serves as a source of oxygen and a sink for carbon dioxide and nutrients like phosphorous. Fecal pellets and dying marine organisms decay as they settle into the deeper layers of the ocean, consuming dissolved oxygen and giving off (dissolved) carbon dioxide. Hence, these layers have much higher carbon dioxide concentrations and lower oxygen concentrations than the waters just below the surface as shown on p. 137. The biological pump determines the carbon dioxide concentration of the water that is exposed to the atmosphere. The marine biosphere is active only in those limited regions of the ocean where upwelling is bringing up nutrients from below. Once nutrients reach the sunlit upper layer of the ocean they are used up in a matter of days by explosive plankton blooms. The long term organic
carbon cycle
The fossil fuel reservoir in Fig. 7.3 is 4200/760 = 5.5 larger than the atmospheric reservoir, so if it were all added to the atmospheric reservoir (by the burning of fossil fuels) without any of it being taken up by the other reservoirs, the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide would increase by a factor of 6.5. This, of course, is an upper limit and not an actual prediction. The long term inorganic
carbon cycle
The carbonate-silicate cycle
However, limestone deposits don't last forever. Eventually they get subducted (drawn down) deep into the earth's crust where temperatures are high enough to cause calcium carbonate to undergo a metamorphosis (a change in form) into calcium-silicate rock (CaSiO3). For each calcium carbonate molecule that that gets transformed a carbon dioxide molecule is released. These carbon dioxide molecules eventually they find their way back to the earth's surface in the emissions from volcanic eruptions or hydrothermal vents. The slow motion of the earth's crust that occurs in association with plate tectonics is responsible for both the subduction of the limestone layers and the volcanic activity that releases the carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Subduction is currently occurring the mid-Pacific, while new crust is emerging from the sea floor and spreading apart along a seam in the mid Atlantic. The calcium-silicate rocks in the emerging crust will eventually be lifted onto land where it will be subject to weathering, thus completing the cycle. The processes involved in the carbonate-silicate cycle are pictured in cartoon form in Fig. 7-17 of the text. If the various processes in this cycle were all proceeding at the same rate, there would be no change in the amount of carbon stored in the various reservoirs. However if something happens that makes one of the reactions proceed at a faster rate than the reverse reaction, then the storages can change. It is known that weathering of rocks proceeds
faster in a warmer climate because rainfall amounts tend to be greater.
By providing calcium ions, weathering promotes limestone formation and
removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Hence, a perturbation of
the earth's climate toward the warm side would favor decreasing atmospheric
carbon dioxide concentrations, which would tend to return the climate to
its original state. In this way, the carbonate-silicate cycle serves
as a negative feedback on the temperature of the earth system.
1) Name and compare the sizes of the major reservoirs of carbon in the
earth system.
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the instructor at: jaegle@atmos.washington.edu
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