Oceans as a Carbon Dioxide Store
- Oceans contain large amounts of dissolved carbon
- They are carbon sinks or reservoirs for carbon storage
- Oceans capture and absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere:
- This is the process of carbon sequestration
- Carbon moves from surface ocean layers to deeper ocean layers through:
- Biological Carbon Pump
- Tiny phytoplankton living in the upper layers need to photosynthesise. They absorb carbon dioxide during this process
- Phytoplankton act as a source of food for other marine life. Carbon moves through the marine food chain into the different layers of the ocean
- Species like plankton also sequester carbon dioxide and use it for their skeletons or shells
- Carbonate Pump
- After organisms die, skeletons or shells can dissolve into the water, enriching deep ocean currents with carbon
- Decaying organisms can also release carbon dioxide
- As animals breathe, carbon is also released into oceans
- Dead organisms can build up and eventually compress on the seafloor and turn into limestone sediment
- Ocean Circulation (physical pump) increases the amount of carbon that can be stored in oceans:
- Thermohaline circulation moves surface and deep ocean currents around the world in a cyclical pattern
- Dissolved carbon moves around oceans through this circulation
- Water density brings carbon-rich waters deep down into ocean stores in a process called downwelling
- Biological Carbon Pump
Diagram illustrating carbon cycling at a 'sere' (lithosere) level
Carbon cycling at a 'sere' (lithosere) level
- Oceans are important for the future and for climate change, as they absorb vast amounts of carbon dioxide
- However, warmer waters cannot absorb as much carbon dioxide as colder waters. As ocean temperatures rise, this could worsen climate change by reducing the efficiency of the oceans as a carbon sink