The movement of carbon between the atmosphere,
oceans and continents — the carbon cycle — is a fundamental process that
regulates Earth’s climate. Some factors, like volcanic eruptions or human activity, emit carbon
dioxide into the atmosphere. Others, such as forests and oceans, absorb that
CO2. In a well-regulated system, the right amount of CO2 is emitted and
absorbed to maintain a healthy climate.
Carbon sequestration is one tactic in the current battle against climate change.
Carbon sequestration is the process of
capturing, securing and storing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The
idea is to stabilize carbon in solid and dissolved forms so that it doesn’t
cause the atmosphere to warm. The process shows tremendous promise for
reducing the human “carbon footprint.” There are two main types of carbon
sequestration: biological and geological.
A new
study finds that the
shape and depth of the ocean floor explain up to 50% of the changes in depth at
which carbon has been sequestered in the ocean over the past 80 million years.
Previously, these changes have been attributed to other causes. Scientists have long known that the ocean,
the largest absorber of carbon on Earth, directly controls the amount of
atmospheric carbon dioxide. But, until now, exactly how changes in seafloor
topography over Earth’s history affect the ocean’s ability to sequester carbon
was not well understood.
“We were able to show,
for the first time, that the shape and depth of the ocean floor play major
roles in the long-term carbon cycle,” said Matthew Bogumil, the paper’s lead
author and a UCLA doctoral student of earth, planetary and space sciences.
The long-term carbon cycle has a lot of moving
parts, all functioning on different time scales. One of those parts is seafloor
bathymetry — the mean depth and shape of the ocean floor. This is, in turn, controlled by the relative
positions of the continent and the oceans, sea level, as well as the flow
within Earth’s mantle. Carbon cycle models calibrated with paleoclimate
datasets form the basis for scientists’ understanding of the global marine
carbon cycle and how it responds to natural perturbations.
“Typically, carbon
cycle models over Earth’s history consider seafloor bathymetry as either a
fixed or a secondary factor,” said Tushar Mittal, the paper’s co-author and a
professor of geosciences at Pennsylvania State University.
The new research, published in Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, reconstructed bathymetry over the
last 80 million years and plugged the data into a computer model that measures
marine carbon sequestration. The results showed that ocean alkalinity, calcite saturation state and
the carbonate compensation depth depended strongly on changes to shallow parts
of the ocean floor (about 600 meters or less) and on how deeper marine regions
(greater than 1,000 meters) are distributed. These three measures are critical
to understanding how carbon is stored in the ocean floor.
The researchers also found that for the current
geologic era, the Cenozoic, bathymetry alone accounted for 33%–50% of the
observed variation in carbon sequestration and concluded that by ignoring bathymetric
changes, researchers mistakenly attribute changes in carbon sequestration to
other, less certain factors, such as atmospheric CO2, water column temperature,
and silicates and carbonates washed into the ocean by rivers.
Bogumil said. “By
studying what nature has done in the past, we can learn more about the possible
outcomes and practicality of marine sequestration to mitigate climate change.”
This new understanding
that the shape and depth of ocean floors is perhaps the greatest influencer of
carbon sequestration can also aid the
search for habitable planets in our universe.
“Now that we know how
important bathymetry is in general, we plan to use new simulations and models
to better understand how differently shaped ocean floors will specifically
affect the carbon cycle and how this has changed over Earth’s history, especially the early Earth, when most of
the land was underwater,” Bogumil said.