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Featured researches published by J. K. Moore.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2017

A reevaluation of the magnitude and impacts of anthropogenic atmospheric nitrogen inputs on the ocean

Timothy D. Jickells; Erik T. Buitenhuis; Katye E. Altieri; Alex R. Baker; Douglas G. Capone; Robert A. Duce; F. Dentener; Katja Fennel; M. Kanakidou; Julie LaRoche; Kitack Lee; Peter S. Liss; Jack J. Middelburg; J. K. Moore; Greg Okin; Andreas Oschlies; M.M. Sarin; Sybil P. Seitzinger; Jonathan Sharples; Arvind Singh; Parvadha Suntharalingam; Mitsuo Uematsu

We report a new synthesis of best estimates of the inputs of fixed nitrogen to the world ocean via atmospheric deposition and compare this to fluvial inputs and dinitrogen fixation. We evaluate the scale of human perturbation of these fluxes. Fluvial inputs dominate inputs to the continental shelf, and we estimate that about 75% of this fluvial nitrogen escapes from the shelf to the open ocean. Biological dinitrogen fixation is the main external source of nitrogen to the open ocean, i.e., beyond the continental shelf. Atmospheric deposition is the primary mechanism by which land-based nitrogen inputs, and hence human perturbations of the nitrogen cycle, reach the open ocean. We estimate that anthropogenic inputs are currently leading to an increase in overall ocean carbon sequestration of ~0.4% (equivalent to an uptake of 0.15 Pg C yr−1 and less than the Duce et al. (2008) estimate). The resulting reduction in climate change forcing from this ocean CO2 uptake is offset to a small extent by an increase in ocean N2O emissions. We identify four important feedbacks in the ocean atmosphere nitrogen system that need to be better quantified to improve our understanding of the perturbation of ocean biogeochemistry by atmospheric nitrogen inputs. These feedbacks are recycling of (1) ammonia and (2) organic nitrogen from the ocean to the atmosphere and back, (3) the suppression of nitrogen fixation by increased nitrogen concentrations in surface waters from atmospheric deposition, and (4) increased loss of nitrogen from the ocean by denitrification due to increased productivity stimulated by atmospheric inputs.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Mechanisms controlling dissolved iron distribution in the North Pacific: A model study

K. Misumi; Daisuke Tsumune; Yoshikatsu Yoshida; Keisuke Uchimoto; Tomohiro Nakamura; Jun Nishioka; Humio Mitsudera; Frank O. Bryan; Keith Lindsay; J. K. Moore; Scott C. Doney

Mechanisms controlling the dissolved iron distribution in the North Pacific are investigated using the Biogeochemical Elemental Cycling (BEC) model with a resolution of approximately 1° in latitude and longitude and 60 vertical levels. The model is able to reproduce the general distribution of iron as revealed in available field data: surface concentrations are generally below 0.2 nM; concentrations increase with depth; and values in the lower pycnocline are especially high in the northwestern Pacific and off the coast of California. Sensitivity experiments changing scavenging regimes and external iron sources indicate that lateral transport of sedimentary iron from continental margins into the open ocean causes the high concentrations in these regions. This offshore penetration only appears under a scavenging regime where iron has a relatively long residence time at high concentrations, namely, the order of years. Sedimentary iron is intensively supplied around continental margins, resulting in locally high concentrations; the residence time with respect to scavenging determines the horizontal scale of elevated iron concentrations. Budget analysis for iron reveals the processes by which sedimentary iron is transported to the open ocean. Horizontal mixing transports sedimentary iron from the boundary into alongshore currents, which then carry high iron concentrations into the open ocean in regions where the alongshore currents separate from the coast, most prominently in the northwestern Pacific and off of California.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015

Multicentury changes in ocean and land contributions to the climate‐carbon feedback

James T. Randerson; Keith Lindsay; Ernesto Munoz; Weiwei Fu; J. K. Moore; Forrest M. Hoffman; N. Mahowald; Scott C. Doney

© 2015. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. Improved constraints on carbon cycle responses to climate change are needed to inform mitigation policy, yet our understanding of how these responses may evolve after 2100 remains highly uncertain. Using the Community Earth System Model (v1.0), we quantified climate-carbon feedbacks from 1850 to 2300 for the Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 and its extension. In three simulations, land and ocean biogeochemical processes experienced the same trajectory of increasing atmospheric CO2. Each simulation had a different degree of radiative coupling for CO2 and other greenhouse gases and aerosols, enabling diagnosis of feedbacks. In a fully coupled simulation, global mean surface air temperature increased by 9.3 K from 1850 to 2300, with 4.4 K of this warming occurring after 2100. Excluding CO2, warming from other greenhouse gases and aerosols was 1.6 K by 2300, near a 2 K target needed to avoid dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system. Ocean contributions to the climate-carbon feedback increased considerably over time and exceeded contributions from land after 2100. The sensitivity of ocean carbon to climate change was found to be proportional to changes in ocean heat content, as a consequence of this heat modifying transport pathways for anthropogenic CO2 inflow and solubility of dissolved inorganic carbon. By 2300, climate change reduced cumulative ocean uptake by 330 Pg C, from 1410 Pg C to 1080 Pg C. Land fluxes similarly diverged over time, with climate change reducing stocks by 232 Pg C. Regional influence of climate change on carbon stocks was largest in the North Atlantic Ocean and tropical forests of South America. Our analysis suggests that after 2100, oceans may become as important as terrestrial ecosystems in regulating the magnitude of the climate-carbon feedback.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2013

North-South asymmetry in the modeled phytoplankton community response to climate change over the 21st century

Irina Marinov; Scott C. Doney; Ivan D. Lima; Keith Lindsay; J. K. Moore; N. Mahowald

Here we analyze the impact of projected climate change on plankton ecology in all major ocean biomes over the 21st century, using a multidecade (1880–2090) experiment conducted with the Community Climate System Model (CCSM-3.1) coupled ocean-atmosphere-land-sea ice model. The climate response differs fundamentally in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres for diatom and small phytoplankton biomass and consequently for total biomass, primary, and export production. Increasing vertical stratification in the Northern Hemisphere oceans decreases the nutrient supply to the ocean surface. Resulting decreases in diatom and small phytoplankton biomass together with a relative shift from diatoms to small phytoplankton in the Northern Hemisphere result in decreases in the total primary and export production and export ratio, and a shift to a more oligotrophic, more efficiently recycled, lower biomass euphotic layer. By contrast, temperature and stratification increases are smaller in the Southern compared to the Northern Hemisphere. Additionally, a southward shift and increase in strength of the Southern Ocean westerlies act against increasing temperature and freshwater fluxes to destratify the water-column. The wind-driven, poleward shift in the Southern Ocean subpolar-subtropical boundary results in a poleward shift and increase in the frontal diatom bloom. This boundary shift, localized increases in iron supply, and the direct impact of warming temperatures on phytoplankton growth result in diatom increases in the Southern Hemisphere. An increase in diatoms and decrease in small phytoplankton partly compensate such that while total production and the efficiency of organic matter export to the deep ocean increase, total Southern Hemisphere biomass does not change substantially. The impact of ecological shifts on the global carbon cycle is complex and varies across ecological biomes, with Northern and Southern Hemisphere effects on the biological production and export partially compensating. The net result of climate change is a small Northern Hemisphere-driven decrease in total primary production and efficiency of organic matter export to the deep ocean.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2018

Mesoscale Effects on Carbon Export: A Global Perspective

Cheryl S. Harrison; Matthew C. Long; Nicole S. Lovenduski; J. K. Moore

Carbon export from the surface to the deep ocean is a primary control on global carbon budgets, and is mediated by plankton that are sensitive to physical forcing. Earth system models generally do not resolve ocean mesoscale circulation ( O(10–100) km), scales that strongly affect transport of nutrients and plankton. The role of mesoscale circulation in modulating export is evaluated by comparing global ocean simulations conducted at 1°and 0.1°horizontal resolution. Mesoscale resolution produces a small reduction in globally-integrated export production (<2%); however, the impact on local export production can be large (±50%), with compensating effects in different ocean basins. With mesoscale resolution, improved representation of coastal jets block off-shelf transport, leading to lower export in regions where shelf-derived nutrients fuel production. Export is further reduced in these regions by resolution of mesoscale turbulence, which restricts the spatial area of production. Maximum mixed layer depths are narrower and deeper across the Subantarctic at higher resolution, driving locally stronger nutrient entrainment and enhanced summer export production. In energetic regions with seasonal blooms, such as the Subantarctic and North Pacific, internally-generated mesoscale variability drives substantial interannual variation in local export production. These results suggest that biogeochemical tracer dynamics show different sensitivities to transport biases than temperature and salinity, which should be considered in the formulation and validation of physical parameterizations. Efforts to compare estimates of export production from observations and models should account for large variability in space and time expected for regions strongly affected by mesoscale circulation.


Nature Geoscience | 2013

Processes and patterns of oceanic nutrient limitation

C. M. Moore; Matthew M. Mills; Kevin R. Arrigo; I Berman-Frank; Laurent Bopp; Philip W. Boyd; Eric D. Galbraith; Richard J. Geider; Cécile Guieu; Samuel L. Jaccard; Timothy D. Jickells; Timothy M. Lenton; Natalie M. Mahowald; Emilio Marañón; Irina Marinov; J. K. Moore; T Nakatsuka; Andreas Oschlies; Mak A. Saito; T F Thingstad; Atsushi Tsuda; Osvaldo Ulloa


Biogeosciences | 2009

Projected 21st century decrease in marine productivity: a multi-model analysis

Marco Steinacher; Fortunat Joos; Thomas L. Frölicher; Laurent Bopp; P. Cadule; Valentina Cocco; Scott C. Doney; M. Gehlen; Keith Lindsay; J. K. Moore; Birgit Schneider; Joachim Segschneider


Biogeosciences | 2009

Carbon-nitrogen interactions regulate climate-carbon cycle feedbacks: Results from an atmosphere-ocean general circulation model

Peter E. Thornton; Scott C. Doney; Keith Lindsay; J. K. Moore; Natalie M. Mahowald; James T. Randerson; Inez Y. Fung; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Johannes J. Feddema; Yen-Huei Lee


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010

Observed 20th century desert dust variability: impact on climate and biogeochemistry

Natalie M. Mahowald; Silvia Kloster; Sebastian Engelstaedter; J. K. Moore; S. Mukhopadhyay; Joseph R. McConnell; Samuel Albani; Scott C. Doney; A. Bhattacharya; Mark A. J. Curran; Mark G. Flanner; Forrest M. Hoffman; David M. Lawrence; Keith Lindsay; Paul Andrew Mayewski; Jason C. Neff; D. Rothenberg; Erik R. Thomas; Peter Edmond Thornton; Charles S. Zender


Biogeosciences | 2008

Satellite-detected fluorescence reveals global physiology of ocean phytoplankton

Michael J. Behrenfeld; Toby K. Westberry; Emmanuel Boss; Robert T. O'Malley; D. A. Siegel; Jerry D. Wiggert; Bryan A. Franz; Chuck McClain; Gene C. Feldman; Scott C. Doney; J. K. Moore; Giorgio Dall'Olmo; Allen J. Milligan; Ivan D. Lima; Natalie M. Mahowald

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Keith Lindsay

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Ivan D. Lima

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Forrest M. Hoffman

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Irina Marinov

University of Pennsylvania

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