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Gruber et al. 1999
Gruber, N., Keeling, C.D., Bacastow, R.B., Guenther, P.R., Lueker, T.J., Wahlen, M., Meijer, H.A.J., Mook, W.G. and Stocker, T.F. (1999). Spatiotemporal patterns of carbon-13 in the global surface oceans and the oceanic Suess effect. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 13: doi: 10.1029/1999GB900019. issn: 0886-6236.

A global synthesis of the 13C/12C ratio of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the surface ocean is attempted by summarizing high-precision data obtained from 1978 to 1997 in all major ocean basins. The data, mainly along transects but including three subtropical time series, are accompanied by simultaneous, precise measurements of DIC concentration and titration alkalinity. The reduced isotopic ratio, &dgr;13C, in the surface ocean water is governed by a balance between biological and thermodynamic processes. These processes have strongly opposing tendencies, which result in a complex spatial pattern in &dgr;13C with relatively little variability. The most distinctive feature in the spatial distribution of &dgr;13C seen in our data is a maximum of &dgr;13C near the subantarctic front with sharply falling values to the south. We attribute this feature to a combination of biological uptake of CO2 depleted in 13C (low &dgr;13C) and air-sea exchange near the front and upwelling further south of waters with low &dgr;13C resulting from the remineralization of organic matter. Additional features are maxima in &dgr;13C downstream of upwelling regions, reflecting biological uptake, and minima in the subtropical gyres caused by strongly temperature dependent thermodynamic isotopic fractionation. At the time series stations, two in the North Atlantic Ocean and one in the North Pacific, distinct seasonal cycles in &dgr;13C are observed, the Pacific data exhibiting only about half the amplitude of the Atlantic. Secular decreases in &dgr;13C caused by the invasion of isotopically light anthropogenic CO2 into the ocean (the 13C Suess effect) have been identified at these times series stations and also in data from repeated transects in the Indian Ocean and the tropical Pacific. A tentative global extrapolation of these secular decreases yields a surface oceanic 13C Suess effect of approximately -0.018? yr-1 from 1980 to 1995. This effect is nearly the same as the 13C Suess effect observed globally in the atmosphere over the same period. We attribute this response to a deceleration in the growth rate of anthropogenic CO2 emissions after 1979, which subsequently has reduced the atmospheric 13C Suess effect more than the surface ocean effect. ¿ 1999 American Geophysical Union

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Global Biogeochemical Cycles
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