| Literature DB >> 34628596 |
Andrew P Rees1, Hermann W Bange2, Damian L Arévalo-Martínez2, Yuri Artioli3, Dawn M Ashby3, Ian Brown3, Hanna I Campen2, Darren R Clark3, Vassilis Kitidis3, Gennadi Lessin3, Glen A Tarran3, Carol Turley3.
Abstract
Human activities are changing the Arctic environment at an unprecedented rate resulting in rapid warming, freshening, sea ice retreat and ocean acidification of the Arctic Ocean. Trace gases such as nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane (CH4) play important roles in both the atmospheric reactivity and radiative budget of the Arctic and thus have a high potential to influence the region's climate. However, little is known about how these rapid physical and chemical changes will impact the emissions of major climate-relevant trace gases from the Arctic Ocean. The combined consequences of these stressors present a complex combination of environmental changes which might impact on trace gas production and their subsequent release to the Arctic atmosphere. Here we present our current understanding of nitrous oxide and methane cycling in the Arctic Ocean and its relevance for regional and global atmosphere and climate and offer our thoughts on how this might change over coming decades.Entities:
Keywords: Arctic Ocean; Environmental change; Ice retreat; Methane; Nitrous oxide; Ocean acidification; Warming
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34628596 PMCID: PMC8692636 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-021-01633-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Exemplar N2O and CH4 publications from Arctic waters to indicate variability in regional source-sink characteristics for the two gases in the upper water column likely to exchange with the overlying atmosphere
Fig. 1Distribution of (a) N2O and (b) CH4 saturation during research cruise PS114 onboard the RV Polarstern during July 2018. The green dotted line in each image represents the southern extent of sea ice at 90% cover (see Supplementary Material for method description)
Fig. 2The impact of decreasing ocean pH and increasing temperature by 2 °C on (a) the rate of nitrification and (b) N2O concentration at four positions in the Fram Straits region of the AO during research cruise PS114 in July 2018 (see Supplementary Material for method description)
Fig. 3Theory of Change visualisation of social and policy implications associated with the PETRA project investigations of N2O and CH4 in a changing AO
Sources and sinks of N2O and CH4 in the AO, the expected effect of ocean warming (and associated melting) and acidification, as well as the level of uncertainties in the current state of knowledge
| Processes | Source/sink | Estimated overall effecta | Level of uncertainty | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Warming | Ocean acidification | |||
| N2O | ||||
| Nitrification | Source | ↑ | ↓ | Medium |
| Denitrification | Source/sink | ↑ | ? | Medium |
| Air-sea exchange | Source/sink | ↑ | ↓ | High |
| Within-ice cycling & fluxes | Source/sink | ? | ? | Very high |
| CH4 | ||||
| Methanogenesis | Source | ↑ | ? | Medium |
| Methanotrophy | Sink | ↑ | ? | Medium |
| Aerobic oxidation | Sink | ↑ | ? | High |
| Air-sea exchange | Source/sink | ↑ | ? | High |
| Within-ice cycling & fluxes | Source/sink | ? | ? | Very high |
a↑ increase, ↓ decrease, ? unknown