Articles

Influence of rain on air-sea gas exchange: Lessons from a model ocean

Schlosser, Peter; Hendricks, Melissa B.; Ho, David T.; Zappa, Christopher J.; McGillis, Wade R.; Bliven, Larry F.; Ward, Brian; Dacey, John W. H.

Rain has been shown to significantly enhance the rate of air-water gas exchange in fresh water environments, and the mechanism behind this enhancement has been studied in laboratory experiments. In the ocean, the effects of rain are complicated by the potential influence of density stratification at the water surface. Since it is difficult to perform controlled rain-induced gas exchange experiments in the open ocean, an SF6 evasion experiment was conducted in the artificial ocean at Biosphere 2. The measurements show a rapid depletion of SF6 in the surface layer due to rain enhancement of air-sea gas exchange, and the gas transfer velocity was similar to that predicted from the relationship established from freshwater laboratory experiments. However, because vertical mixing is reduced by stratification, the overall gas flux is lower than that found during freshwater experiments. Physical measurements of various properties of the ocean during the rain events further elucidate the mechanisms behind the observed response. The findings suggest that short, intense rain events accelerate gas exchange in oceanic environments.

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Also Published In

Title
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2003JC001806

More About This Work

Academic Units
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
Earth and Environmental Engineering
Ocean and Climate Physics
Geochemistry
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
Published Here
March 2, 2016