Carbon dioxide removal via macroalgae open-ocean mariculture and sinking: an Earth system modeling study

Jiajun Wu, David P. Keller, Andreas Oschlies
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract. In this study, we investigate the maximum physical and biogeochemical potential of macroalgae open-ocean mariculture and sinking (MOS) as an ocean-based carbon dioxide removal (CDR) method. Embedding a macroalgae model into an Earth system model, we simulate macroalgae mariculture in the open-ocean surface layer followed by fast sinking of the carbon-rich macroalgal biomass to the deep seafloor (depth>3000 m), which assumes no remineralization of the harvested biomass during the quick sinking. We also test the combination of MOS with artificial upwelling (AU), which fertilizes the macroalgae by pumping nutrient-rich deeper water to the surface. The simulations are done under RCP 4.5, a moderate-emissions pathway. When deployed globally between years 2020 and 2100, the carbon captured and exported by MOS is 270 PgC, which is further boosted by AU of 447 PgC. Because of feedbacks in the Earth system, the oceanic carbon inventory only increases by 171.8 PgC (283.9 PgC with AU) in the idealized simulations. More than half of this carbon remains in the ocean after cessation at year 2100 until year 3000. The major side effect of MOS on pelagic ecosystems is the reduction of phytoplankton net primary production (PNPP) due to the competition for nutrients with macroalgae and due to canopy shading. MOS shrinks the mid-layer oxygen-minimum zones (OMZs) by reducing the organic matter export to, and remineralization in, subsurface and intermediate waters, while it creates new OMZs on the seafloor by oxygen consumption from remineralization of sunken biomass. MOS also impacts the global carbon cycle by reducing the atmospheric and terrestrial carbon reservoirs when enhancing the ocean carbon reservoir. MOS also enriches dissolved inorganic carbon in the deep ocean. Effects are mostly reversible after cessation of MOS, though recovery is not complete by year 3000. In a sensitivity experiment without remineralization of sunken MOS biomass, the whole of the MOS-captured carbon is permanently stored in the ocean, but the lack of remineralized nutrients causes a long-term nutrient decline in the surface layers and thus reduces PNPP. Our results suggest that MOS has, theoretically, considerable CDR potential as an ocean-based CDR method. However, our simulations also suggest that such large-scale deployment of MOS would have substantial side effects on marine ecosystems and biogeochemistry, up to a reorganization of food webs over large parts of the ocean.
通过大型海藻的远洋海水养殖和下沉去除二氧化碳:地球系统建模研究
摘要在这项研究中,我们研究了大型藻类作为海洋二氧化碳去除(CDR)方法的最大物理和生物地球化学潜力。将大型藻类模型嵌入到地球系统模型中,我们模拟了大型藻类在开放海洋表层的海水养殖,然后将富含碳的大型藻类生物量快速下沉到深海海底(深度3000 m),假设在快速下沉过程中收获的生物量没有再矿化。我们还测试了MOS与人工上升流(AU)的结合,人工上升流通过将富含营养的深层水泵到地表来给大型藻类施肥。模拟是在中等排放路径rcp4.5下进行的。如果在2020年至2100年期间在全球部署,MOS捕获和出口的碳量为270 PgC, AU将进一步增加447 PgC。由于地球系统的反馈作用,在理想模拟条件下,海洋碳储量仅增加171.8 PgC(含AU时增加283.9 PgC)。超过一半的碳在2100年停止后留在海洋中,直到3000年。MOS对远洋生态系统的主要副作用是浮游植物净初级生产量(PNPP)的减少,这是由于与大型藻类争夺营养物质以及由于树冠遮荫造成的。MOS通过减少有机物向地下和中层水体的输出和再矿化来缩小中层氧最小带(OMZs),同时通过下沉生物量再矿化的氧气消耗在海底创造新的OMZs。MOS还通过减少大气和陆地碳库而增强海洋碳库来影响全球碳循环。MOS还丰富了深海中溶解的无机碳。在停止服用MOS后,效果大多是可逆的,尽管到3000年恢复不完全。在未对沉没的MOS生物质进行再矿化的敏感性实验中,MOS捕获的碳全部永久储存在海洋中,但再矿化营养物质的缺乏导致表层营养物质长期下降,从而降低了PNPP。我们的研究结果表明,理论上,MOS作为一种基于海洋的CDR方法具有相当大的CDR潜力。然而,我们的模拟也表明,如此大规模的MOS部署将对海洋生态系统和生物地球化学产生重大的副作用,直至海洋大部分地区的食物网重组。
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