Modeling Terrestrial Dissolved Organic Carbon and Its Effect on the Carbonate System in the Sunda Shelf Seas, Southeast Asia

Bernhard Mayer*, Stefan Hagemann, Yongli Zhou, Yuan Chen, Shawn Bing Hong Ang, Johannes Pätsch, Patrick Martin*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The flux of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from land to sea is an important transfer within the global carbon cycle. The biogeochemical fate of this terrestrial DOC (tDOC) remains poorly understood and is usually neglected in ocean models. Southeast Asia accounts for around 10% of global tDOC flux, mostly from tropical peatland-draining rivers discharging onto the Sunda Shelf. We developed a new light-driven parameterization of tDOC remineralization that accounts for photochemical, microbial, and interactive photochemical–microbial degradation, and simulated the transport and remineralization of tDOC through the Sunda Shelf seas using the regional 3D hydrodynamical HAMSOM and biogeochemical ECOHAM models (only for the carbonate system). Our realistic hindcast simulations for 1958–2022 show that about 50% of riverine tDOC is remineralized before leaving the shelf. This lowers seawater pH across the entire inner Sunda Shelf by an average of 0.005 (by up to 0.05 in the Malacca Strait). Correspondingly, seawater (Formula presented.) is raised, increasing yearly (Formula presented.) outgassing from the shelf by 19% (3.1 Tg C (Formula presented.), 0.14 mol (Formula presented.) (Formula presented.)) during 2013–2022. Even regional ocean acidification trends increase, because river discharge and tDOC flux increase. Our model reveals large spatial variability with greatest inputs and remineralization of tDOC close to major peatlands, especially off Sumatra and Borneo. The interannual variability in tDOC input and the monsoonal current reversal lead to strong temporal variability in carbonate system parameters in these areas. Our results highlight the importance of representing tDOC in ocean models, and reveal the fate of tropical peatland tDOC.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2024GB008433
JournalGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles
Volume39
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2025
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s).

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Global and Planetary Change
  • Environmental Chemistry
  • General Environmental Science
  • Atmospheric Science

Keywords

  • land-ocean carbon flux
  • numerical modeling
  • photochemical-microbial interactions
  • remineralization
  • terrestrial CDOM
  • terrestrial DOC

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