The Rate of Air-Sea CO2 Exchange: Chemical Enhancement and Catalysis by Marine Microalgae.
List of Figures and Tables
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Chapter 1
Figure 1-1 : Some climate feedback processes.
Figure 1-2 : Solubility and Biological pumps.
Figure 1-3 : CO2 concentration profile across the air-sea interface.
Figure 1-4 : Summary of parameterisations of the transfer velocity.
Figure 1-5 : Reaction and diffusion.
Chapter 2
Figure 2-1 : (a) Structure of Human Carbonic Anhydrase "C" (b) Mechanism of catalysis of CO2 hydration / dehydration.
Table 2-1 : Some species of marine microalgae in which carbonic anhydrase has been detected:.
Table 2-2 : Some enzyme kinetic data for carbonic anhydrase.
Chapter 3
Figure 3-1 : A simple model of CO2 uptake by a hypothetical spherical diatom, showing catalysis by carbonic anhydrase
Figure 3-2 : Increase of cell growth rate due to carbonic anhydrase, as a function of CO2 and temperature
Figure 3-3 : Effect of Carbonic Anhydrase on the Transfer Velocity
Figure 3-4 : Effect of windspeed averaging
Figure 3-5 : Effect of various distributions of enzyme as a function of pCO2
Figure 3-6 : The effect on the 14C flux is different from that on the 12C flux!
Table 3-1 : Methods of measuring pCO2 for gas exchange experiments
Figure 3-7 :Excitation-emission-matrix plot of carbonic anhydrase -dansyl amide fluorescence
Chapter 4
Figure 4-1 : Plan for a steady-state tank
Figure 4-2 : Principle of steady-state transfer velocity measurement
Figure 4-3 : Computer model of gases in tank: approach to steady-state
Figure 4-4 : Overview of Tank design
Figure 4-5 : Tank Dimension
Figure 4-6 : Gas tight seals
Figure 4-7 : Effect of water stirring paddle on oxygen transfer velocity
Figure 4-8 : No effect of air-stirring on oxygen transfer velocity
Chapter 5
Figure 5-1 : Playing the fiddle to the phytoplankton in the lab!
Table 5-1 : Nutrients in f / 2 medium
Figure 5-2 : Inside the LiCOR analyser
Figure 5-3 : Flow system for CO2 gas exchange
Figure 5-4 : Computer trace of typical CO2 transfer velocity measurements
Figure 5-5 : TCO2 flow system
Figure 5-6 : SF6 flow system
Figure 5-7 : Typical SF6 calibration curves
Figure 5-8 : SF6 transfer velocity measurements
Figure 5-9 : Oxygen transfer velocity measurements
Chapter 6
Table 6-1 : Measured Quantities.
Table 6-2 : Thermodynamic and kinetic constants -formulae and references.
Table 6-3 : Seawater chemistry
Figure 6-1 : Measured vs Calculated TCO2
Figure 6-2 : Chemical Speciation as a function of TCO2
Table 6-4 : Predicted CO2 Transfer Velocities
Table 6-5 : Measured CO2 transfer velocities
Table 6-6 : Non- steady state error
Table 6-7 : Total and biological carbon
Chapter 7
Figure 7-1 : Transfer velocity as a function of stirring paddle speed.
Figure 7-2 : Transfer velocity as a function of temperature
Figure 7-3 : Transfer velocity multiplied by dimensionless solubility, as a function of temperature
Table 7-1 :Temperature dependence of kinetic and thermodynamic constants of the carbonate system
Table 7-2 : Summary of SF6 and O2 transfer velocities
Figure 7-4 : Comparison of SF6 and Oxygen transfer velocities
Figure 7-5 : Effect of water pCO2 on measured transfer velocity
Figure 7-6 : Effect of [OH-]on measured transfer velocity
Figure 7-7 : (a)Transfer velocity (cm hr-1) as a function of air and water pCO2, (b)Contour plot of Figure 7-7(a)
Figure 7-8 : First enzyme activity decline experiment
Figure 7-9 : Second enzyme activity decline experiment
Figure 7-10 : Transfer velocity as a function of added bovine enzyme
Figure 7-11 : Comparison of measured and predicted enhancement factors
Figure 7-12 : Matching prediction to low-pCO2 measurements by increasing OH- reaction rate by a factor of 6
Figure 7-13 : Comparison of measured and predicted enhancement, when the OH- reaction rate is multiplied by a factor of 6
Table 7-3 : previously published measurements of chemical enhancement
Figure 7-14 : Previously published measurements of chemical enhancement: Comparison of measurements and predictions.
Figure 7-15 : CO2 and SF6 transfer rates measured in PML tank by Law, Frankignoulle and Watson 1993.
Chapter 8
Table 8-1 : Summary of all the blooms in the tank
Figure 8-1 : Chlorophyll and Biological Carbon
Figure 8-2 : 1st Dunaliella bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-3 : 2nd Dunaliella bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-4 : Phaeodactylum bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-5 : Amphidinium bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-6 : Samples from North Sea spring bloom of Phaeocystis: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Table 8-2 : Samples from the North Sea spring bloom
Figure 8-7 : 3rd Dunaliella bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-8 : 4th Dunaliella bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-9 : Skeletonema bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-10 : Emiliana Huxleyi bloom: (a) gas exchange (b) carbon budget
Figure 8-11 : Composite plot of all transfer velocities measured during algal blooms, together with no-algae control measurements, as a function of pCO2
Figure 8-12 : Composite plot as Figure 8-11, close up of "normal" pCO2 range
Figure 8-13 : As Figure 8-12, showing effect of uncertainty in water pCO2 during the Emiliana bloom. Effect of surface film or catalysis by CA?
Figure 8-14 : Composite plot of all data using weighted average transfer velocities
Figure 8-15 : As Figure 8-13, showing "normal" pCO2 range
Figure 8-16 : Weighted average transfer velocities as a function of biological carbon
Figure 8-17 : Example of direct uptake of air CO2 by a surface algal film in the tank
Figure 8-18 : Effect of surface film at end of the 4th Dunaliella bloom: (a) Measured pCO2 in headspaces and (b) Calculated fluxes
Figure 8-19 : Effect of surface film at end of the Emiliana bloom: (a) Measured pCO2 in headspaces and (b) Calculated fluxes
Chapter 9
Figure 9-1 : Maps of windspeed and temperature data,
Figure 9-2 : Maps of D pCO2 and [OH-]distributions
Figure 9-3 : Maps of chlorophyll data
Figure 9-4 : Summary of all input data
Table 9-1 : Summary of enzyme distributions
Figure 9-5 : Maps of enzyme catalysis predicted using "low-cost" physiological distn
Table 9-2 : Summary of calculated net global CO2 fluxes and global average transfer velocities without catalysis
Figure 9-6 : Transfer velocities without any enhancement (ku2, fu2, ku8, fu8, ku, fu)
Figure 9-7 : Comparison of Wanninkhof and Liss & Merlivat paramns (kuwq, fuwz)
Figure 9-8 : Rayleigh windspeeds -comparison of various distributions
Figure 9-9 : Effect of Rayleigh distribution on transfer velocity and CO2 flux (kurq, furz)
Figure 9-10 : Uncatalysed chemical enhancement (plots kd2, fd2, kd8 ,fd8, kd, fd)
Figure 9-11 : Scatterplots of enhancement and windspeed as a function of pCO2 and temperature
Figure 9-12 : Effect of Rayleigh distribution on uncatalysed enhancement (plots kdr8, fdr8, kdrq, kdrz, fdrz)
Figure 9-13 : Chemical enhancement using Wanninkhof parameterisation (kdw8, fdw8, kdwq, fdwz)
Figure 9-14 : Effect of Rayleigh distribution on enhancement using Wanninkhof parameterisation (plots kdwrz, fdwrz)
Figure 9-15 : Maps of transfer velocity and fluxes due to reaction only, using faster OH- reaction rate (plots kdo2, kdo5, kdo8, kdo11, fd02, fdo8)
Figure 9-16 : Comparison of enhancement with and without faster OH- reaction rate (plots kdoq, fdoz)
Figure 9-17 : Effect of catalysis on net global air-sea CO2 flux (top) and global average transfer velocity (bottom), as a function of average enzyme concentration
Figure 9-18 : Scatterplots of chlorophyll and enhancement due to catalysis as a function of D pCO2 and temperature.
Figure 9-19 : Scatterplots of carbonic anhydrase per cell as a function of D pCO2 and temperature, for the two physiological distributions
Table 9-3 : Summary of all net global air-sea CO2 fluxes (a) and global average transfer velocities (b) calculated using the Liss and Merlivat parameterisation
Table 9-4 : Summary of all net global air-sea CO2 fluxes (a) and global average transfer velocities (b) calculated using the Wanninkhof parameterisation
Figure 9-20 : Maps showing effect of increasing enzyme concentration on the distribution of chemical enhancement (kd8, fd8, kda8, fda8, kdc8, and fdc8).
Figure 9-21 : Maps of catalysed enhancement with chlorophyll-only and "high cost" distributions, in four seasons (plots kdc2, kdn2, fdn2, kdc5, kdn5, fdn5, kdc8, kdn8, fdn8, kdc11, kdn11, fdn11)
Figure 9-22 : Comparison of chlorophyll-only and "high cost" physiological distributions, at three different average enzyme concns (kdg, kdc, kdi, kdp, kdn, kdy)
Figure 9-23 : Catalysed transfer velocities and fluxes using the "low-cost" physiological distribution (plots kdd8, kdd, fdd8, fdd, fdh)
Table 9-5 : Amount of enzyme needed to resolve transfer velocity discrepancy, and effect of this in the net global air-sea CO2 flux
Appendix
Figure A-1 : CA-DA fluorescence calibration experiments.
Figure A-2 : CA-DA fluorescence in seawater from North Sea spring bloom
Figure A-3 : Fluorescence Measurements of Microlayer Enrichment
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