TY - JOUR
T1 - Time of Emergence and Large Ensemble Intercomparison for Ocean Biogeochemical Trends
AU - Schlunegger, Sarah
AU - Rodgers, Keith B.
AU - Sarmiento, Jorge L.
AU - Ilyina, Tatiana
AU - Dunne, John P.
AU - Takano, Yohei
AU - Christian, James R.
AU - Long, Matthew C.
AU - Frölicher, Thomas L.
AU - Slater, Richard
AU - Lehner, Flavio
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2020. The Authors.
PY - 2020/8/1
Y1 - 2020/8/1
N2 - Anthropogenically forced changes in ocean biogeochemistry are underway and critical for the ocean carbon sink and marine habitat. Detecting such changes in ocean biogeochemistry will require quantification of the magnitude of the change (anthropogenic signal) and the natural variability inherent to the climate system (noise). Here we use Large Ensemble (LE) experiments from four Earth system models (ESMs) with multiple emissions scenarios to estimate Time of Emergence (ToE) and partition projection uncertainty for anthropogenic signals in five biogeochemically important upper-ocean variables. We find ToEs are robust across ESMs for sea surface temperature and the invasion of anthropogenic carbon; emergence time scales are 20–30 yr. For the biological carbon pump, and sea surface chlorophyll and salinity, emergence time scales are longer (50+ yr), less robust across the ESMs, and more sensitive to the forcing scenario considered. We find internal variability uncertainty, and model differences in the internal variability uncertainty, can be consequential sources of uncertainty for projecting regional changes in ocean biogeochemistry over the coming decades. In combining structural, scenario, and internal variability uncertainty, this study represents the most comprehensive characterization of biogeochemical emergence time scales and uncertainty to date. Our findings delineate critical spatial and duration requirements for marine observing systems to robustly detect anthropogenic change.
AB - Anthropogenically forced changes in ocean biogeochemistry are underway and critical for the ocean carbon sink and marine habitat. Detecting such changes in ocean biogeochemistry will require quantification of the magnitude of the change (anthropogenic signal) and the natural variability inherent to the climate system (noise). Here we use Large Ensemble (LE) experiments from four Earth system models (ESMs) with multiple emissions scenarios to estimate Time of Emergence (ToE) and partition projection uncertainty for anthropogenic signals in five biogeochemically important upper-ocean variables. We find ToEs are robust across ESMs for sea surface temperature and the invasion of anthropogenic carbon; emergence time scales are 20–30 yr. For the biological carbon pump, and sea surface chlorophyll and salinity, emergence time scales are longer (50+ yr), less robust across the ESMs, and more sensitive to the forcing scenario considered. We find internal variability uncertainty, and model differences in the internal variability uncertainty, can be consequential sources of uncertainty for projecting regional changes in ocean biogeochemistry over the coming decades. In combining structural, scenario, and internal variability uncertainty, this study represents the most comprehensive characterization of biogeochemical emergence time scales and uncertainty to date. Our findings delineate critical spatial and duration requirements for marine observing systems to robustly detect anthropogenic change.
KW - Earth system models
KW - Time of Emergence
KW - anthropogenic trends
KW - model intercomparison
KW - ocean biogeochemistry
KW - uncertainty quantification
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85085840027
U2 - 10.1029/2019GB006453
DO - 10.1029/2019GB006453
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85085840027
SN - 0886-6236
VL - 34
JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
IS - 8
M1 - e2019GB006453
ER -