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Impact of sea ice on air-sea CO2 exchange – A critical review of polar eddy covariance studies

  • Jennifer Watts
  • , Thomas G. Bell
  • , Karen Anderson
  • , Brian J. Butterworth
  • , Scott Miller
  • , Brent Else
  • , Jamie Shutler

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Sparse in situ measurements and poor understanding of the impact of sea ice on air-sea gas exchange introduce large uncertainties to models of polar oceanic carbon uptake. The eddy covariance technique can be used to produce insightful air-sea gas exchange datasets in the presence of sea ice, but results differ between studies. We present a critical review of historical polar eddy covariance studies and can identify only five that present comparable flux datasets. Assessment of ancillary datasets, including sea-ice coverage and type and air-sea concentration gradient of carbon dioxide, used to interpret flux datasets (with a specific focus on their role in estimating and interpreting sea ice zone gas transfer velocities) identifies that standardised methodologies to characterise the flux footprint would be beneficial. In heterogeneous ice environments both ancillary data uncertainties and controls on gas exchange are notably complex. To address the poor understanding, we highlight how future efforts should focus on the collection of robust gas flux datasets within heterogeneous sea ice regions during key seasonal processes alongside consistent ancillary data with a full characterisation of their associated uncertainties.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102741
JournalProgress in Oceanography
Volume201
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2022

Keywords

  • Air-sea carbon-dioxide fluxes
  • Air-sea gas exchange
  • Eddy covariance
  • Gas transfer velocity
  • Remote sensing
  • Sea ice

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