Approximately half of the CO
2 emitted by fossil fuel burning
remains in the atmosphere; the rest is absorbed by the ocean or incorporated by
the terrestrial biosphere in roughly equal measures. Two studies reassess the
uptake of CO
2 by these sinks (see the Perspective by
Baker). In
order to understand the relative role of different parts of the terrestrial
biosphere as carbon sinks, global measurements of atmospheric CO
2
concentration must be interpreted by "inversion" models to determine how uptake,
emission, and transport contribute to the seasonal and regional differences.
Previous studies have suggested that there must be a strong carbon sink in the
Northern Hemisphere, and that the tropics are a net carbon source.
Stephens et al. (p.
1732)
report that global vertical distributions of CO
2 in the atmosphere
are not consistent with that interpretation but are more consistent with models
that show a smaller Northern Hemispheric carbon sink and possibly strong carbon
uptake in the tropics. The rate of uptake of CO
2 depends on the
difference between the partial pressure of CO
2 in the atmosphere and
that which would exist if the ocean and the atmosphere were at equilibrium.
Le Quéré et al. (p.
1735,
published online 17 May) report that the rate of uptake by Southern Ocean, one
of the most important CO
2-absorbing regions, has slowed relative to
what would be expected based solely on how fast the concentration of atmospheric
CO
2 has risen since 1981. They attribute this shortfall to an
increase in windiness over the Southern Ocean that increases the outgassing of
natural CO
2. The increased windiness has also been ascribed to human
activity, and the authors predict that this relative trend will continue.