Oxygen isotope anomaly in tropospheric CO2 and implications for CO2 residence time in the atmosphere and gross primary productivity

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作者
Mao-Chang Liang
Sasadhar Mahata
Amzad H. Laskar
Mark H. Thiemens
Sally Newman
机构
[1] Research Center for Environmental Changes,
[2] Academia Sinica,undefined
[3] Graduate Institute of Astronomy,undefined
[4] National Central University,undefined
[5] Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,undefined
[6] University of California at San Diego,undefined
[7] Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences,undefined
[8] California Institute of Technology,undefined
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The abundance variations of near surface atmospheric CO2 isotopologues (primarily 16O12C16O, 16O13C16O, 17O12C16O, and 18O12C16O) represent an integrated signal from anthropogenic/biogeochemical processes, including fossil fuel burning, biospheric photosynthesis and respiration, hydrospheric isotope exchange with water, and stratospheric photochemistry. Oxygen isotopes, in particular, are affected by the carbon and water cycles. Being a useful tracer that directly probes governing processes in CO2 biogeochemical cycles, Δ17O (=ln(1 + δ17O) − 0.516 × ln(1 + δ18O)) provides an alternative constraint on the strengths of the associated cycles involving CO2. Here, we analyze Δ17O data from four places (Taipei, Taiwan; South China Sea; La Jolla, United States; Jerusalem, Israel) in the northern hemisphere (with a total of 455 measurements) and find a rather narrow range (0.326 ± 0.005‰). A conservative estimate places a lower limit of 345 ± 70 PgC year−1 on the cycling flux between the terrestrial biosphere and atmosphere and infers a residence time of CO2 of 1.9 ± 0.3 years (upper limit) in the atmosphere. A Monte Carlo simulation that takes various plant uptake scenarios into account yields a terrestrial gross primary productivity of 120 ± 30 PgC year−1 and soil invasion of 110 ± 30 PgC year−1, providing a quantitative assessment utilizing the oxygen isotope anomaly for quantifying CO2 cycling.
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