Award: OCE-1737188

Award Title: Collaborative Research: Combining Theory and Observations to Constrain Global Ocean Deoxygenation
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: Simone Metz

Outcomes Report

This project aims to better understand the loss of dissolved oxygen from the oceans under global warming, termed as ocean deoxygenation, through combination of observational and theoretical approaches. The uptake of heat from the atmosphere causes ocean temperature to rise, causing a decline of solubility of oxygen in the seawater. Ocean warming can cause changes in physical circulation, mixing and biochemical processes, further changing the distribution of oxygen in the sea. In this project, we examine the loss of oxygen in the historic dataset over the past 50 years together with computational modeling and theoretical analysis. The loss of oxygen is significantly stronger than expected oxygen loss from the warming-induced solubility change, this implies important roles of circulation and biochemical processes. The observed oxygen-heat ratio measures how many moles of oxygen has been lost per degree warming of the seawater. This ratio can be used to estimate oxygen loss in relation to ocean heat uptake, and it can be an important benchmark for earth system model simulations. This project examined how this ratio is determined globally and regionally. In the North Atlantic where deep waters form, this ratio primarily comes from the vertical gradients of temperature and oxygen. Vertical exchange of water between the surface and interior ocean covary according to their vertical gradients, which modulates the air-sea fluxes of heat and oxygen. Regionally, there is no simple relationship that links changes in ocean temperature and oxygen content as they are controlled by distinct physical and biochemical processes. Modes of climate variability play important roles determining the regional pattern of observed oxygen changes. The patterns of oxygen changes associated with Pacific Decadal Oscillation is analyzed in observations and computational model. This pattern dominates the structure of upper ocean oxygen changes other than the long-term trend in the North Pacific basin through the modulation of mixed layer depths, shifts in water masses, and biological consumption of oxygen in the subsurface waters. Globally, the vertical and isopycnal mixing of waters regulates the ventilation of oxygen and anthropogenic heat into the interior ocean. Through the analysis of a large number of model runs with varying mixing coefficients, a pattern emerged that the stronger ocean mixing leads to higher level of heat and oxygen inventories in the mean state, and the loss of oxygen under global warming is also stronger under stronger ocean mixing. These variations in the rate of ocean deoxygenation have a quasi-linear relationship with the rate of ocean heat uptake in the global scale. This implies that correct representation of the mean state is a requirement for better representation of oxygen changes under ocean warming. Last Modified: 10/05/2021 Submitted by: Takamitsu Ito
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
An objective map of global dissolved oxygen anomaly data based on World Ocean Database (2018) from 1965 to 20152021-04-20Final no updates expected

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People

Principal Investigator: Takamitsu Ito (Georgia Tech Research Corporation)