“Biogeochemical Cycles and Climate”
Prof.
Nicolas Gruber
Department
of Atmospheric Sciences & IGPP
University
of
California,
Los
Angeles
You
can view Niki's overhead presentations on the web
by clicking here,
going to 'Gruber' and
scrolling down to 'Talks'.
Lecture 1: Monday, October 7, 2002
from 3:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Biogeochemical/physical-climate interactions and the carbon cycle
A brief introduction into the nature of
biogeochemical cycles and how they can interact with the physical
climate system. The two systems are interacting through a multitude of
processes: Through modification of the atmospheric composition
(greenhouse gases, aerosols, etc), changes in the land/ocean surface
properties (albedo, roughness), or through changes in the hydrological
cycle (evapo-transpiration, etc). The focus of the lecture series will
be on the influence of earth's biogeochemical cycles on the
atmospheric composition, with a strong emphasis on the carbon cycle.
Introduction of the global carbon cycle. Discussion
of reservoir sizes and exchange rates, including the human
perturbation. What controls the distribution of carbon between the
three major reservoirs, and what is the time-scale of exchange between
them? Highlight the role of the ocean in having a strong influence on
the atmospheric CO2 concentration on time-scales longer than a decade.
Furthermore, biological processes in the ocean in interaction with the
large-scale oceanic circulation lead to a depletion of the surface
ocean carbon content, causing a substantially lower atmospheric CO2
content than if they ocean was dead. What controls this
"biological pump" in the ocean?
Lecture 2: Tuesday, October 8, 2002 from 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
The fate of anthropogenic CO2
Only about half of CO2 that is being emitted by the
burning of fossil fuel is accumulating in the atmosphere, the other
half is being taken up by the ocean and land biosphere. Review
mechanisms of ocean and land biosphere uptake. In the ocean,
mechanisms are relatively well understood. Transfer across the air-sea
interface and transport of the anthropogenic CO2 into the abyss by the
"solubility pump". Review and discussions of constraints on
this uptake. Oxygen and Carbon-13 based methods, direct determination
of anthropogenic CO2 in the ocean. Comparison with Model estimates. On
land, mechanisms are very poorly understood. Leading candidate
processes are CO2 and nitrogen fertilization, land use history and
fire suppression. Brief discussion of current understanding of
mechanisms. Approaches.
Recommended reading: Sarmiento, J.L. and N. Gruber.
Sinks for anthropogenic carbon, Physics Today, 55(8), 30-36, 2002.
available from http://www.atmos.ucla.edu/~gruber/publ_fs.htm
Lecture 3: Thursday, October 10, 2002
from 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Future carbon-cycle/climate feedbacks
Climate change will very likely impact the ability
of the land biosphere and the ocean to absorb anthropogenic CO2 from
the atmosphere, leading to feedbacks between future climate change and
the global carbon cycle. On the ocean side, the feedbacks involve both
the physical uptake of anthropogenic CO2 across the air-sea interface
and the transport of this CO2 into the abyss (the solubility pump), as
well as interactions with the ocean's biological pump. How are these
two pumps going to respond to climate change? Most models simulations
indicate that the solubility pump acts as a positive feedback
(enhancing future warming), whereas the ocean's biological pump
overall acts as a negative feedback. Discussion about robustness of
these results, and other effects. On the land side, no clear answer
has emerged so far from modeling studies. Results depend crucially on
the nature of the assumed nature of the current land carbon sink. What
have people learned from manipulation studies? Should we engage in
similar studies in the ocean?
Lecture 4: Tuesday, October 15, 2002
from 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Insights from the past: What caused the
glacial/interglacial
CO2 transitions? Part I
Earth has experienced four major glaciation cycles
over the last 420,000 years with large implications (and interactions)
with the global carbon cycle. We know from the analysis of air bubbles
trapped in Antarctic ice-cores that each of these glaciations was
accompanied by a 80 to 100 ppm drop in the atmospheric CO2
concentration. Comparison between these atmospheric CO2 records and
reconstructed temperatures for Antarctica show that there exists a
tight linkage between the two at nearly all frequencies longer than
five thousand years. This remarkable coupling between earth's physical
climate and the global carbon cycle is not understood and one of the
outstanding puzzles of carbon cycle research. These atmospheric CO2
variations are controlled by the ocean, so we must seek an answer in
changes in the ocean carbon cycle.
Review the components that are relatively well
constrained, such as the global ocean temperature change and the
salinity change associated with the loss of freshwater. Discuss
large-scale (ocean and
atmosphere) circulation during glacial times.
Provide overview of proposed hypotheses, stratified according to
mechanisms that mostly rely on changes in ocean circulation and those
that mostly rely on changes in ocean biology. Start discussion with
mostly physically based hypotheses, such as the sea-ice mechanism,
etc. Highlight role of the Southern Ocean and of the CaCO3 cycle.
Lecture 5: Thursday, October 17, 2002
from 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
What caused the glacial/interglacial CO2
transitions? Part II
Discussions continue with mostly biologically driven
mechanisms with a focus on the iron cycle and its multi-faceted
imprints on the ocean's nitrogen and silicon cycle. Provide a short
introduction to these two cycles. Nitrogen Fixation and
denitrification. Opal production and dissolution. Review and discuss
N2-fixation/denitrification hypothesis, assumptions, limits, paleo
evidence. Review and discuss the linked iron/diatom/CaCO3 hypothesis,
assumptions, limits, and paleo evidence. Conclude with discussion
about approaches to move forward; do we need a much more integrated
approach, i.e. investigate the linkage between land, ocean and
atmosphere?