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Last Updated Sep 27, 2025
Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Biological Carbon Sequestration on Land and in Oceans quickly and effectively.
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🔗 The processes operating in oceans to circulate and store carbon. There are three sorts:
• Biological • Carbonate • Physical.
Carbon Cycle Pumps
Biological Pump | The organic sequestration of CO2 to oceans by phytoplankton → Microscopic, usually single-celled, marine plants float near the surface (allows them to access sunlight for photosynthesis) • known as the base of the marine food web ● Phytoplankton have rapid growth rates (NPP) • especially in shallow water of continental shelves where rivers carry nutrients far out to sea ● C then passed up the food chain by consumer fish and zooplankton, which release CO2 back into the water and atmosphere ● Most is recycled in surface waters ↳ Only 0.1% reaches the sea floor after the dead phytoplankton sink, where they decompose or are turned into sediment |
---|---|
Carbonate Pump | Relies on inorganic carbon sedimentation ● Marine organisms utilise CaCO3 to make hard outer shells and inner skeletons ● When organisms die and sink, majority of shells dissolve before reaching the sea floor sediments ● The C becomes part of the deep ocean currents ● Shells that do not dissolve build up slowly on the seafloor, forming limestone sediments |
Physical Pump | Based on the oceanic circulation of water including upwelling, downwelling and the thermohaline current → The global system of surface and deep water ocean currents is driven by temp and salinity differences between areas of oceans ● CO2 in oceans mixed up more slowly than in the atmosphere ∴ there are large spatial differences in CO2 conc ○ Colder the water, the more potential for CO2 to be absorbed ↳ Warm tropical waters release CO2 to the atmosphere but colder high lat oceans take in CO2 from the atmosphere |
Terrestrial Sequestration
Can be stored in soil or returned to atmosphere through biological decomposition
Soils store a large amount of global carbon ↳ The capacity of soil to store organic carbon is determined by
Climate
Soil type
Management and use of soil
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