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Implementing Riverine Biogeochemical Inputs in ECCO-Darwin: a Critical Step Forward for a Pioneering Data-Assimilative Global-Ocean Biogeochemistry Model

Title: Implementing Riverine Biogeochemical Inputs in ECCO-Darwin: a Critical Step Forward for a Pioneering Data-Assimilative Global-Ocean Biogeochemistry Model
Authors: Savelli, Raphaël; Carroll, Dustin; Menemenlis, Dimitris; Lauderdale, Jonathan; Bertin, Clément; Dutkiewicz, Stephanie; Manizza, Manfredi; Bloom, Anthony; Castro-Morales, Karel; Miller, Charles E.; Simard, Marc; Bowman, Kevin W.; Zhang, Hong
Source: eISSN
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
Description: Terrestrial sources of carbon and nutrients drive biogeochemical cycles in coastal regions and in the global ocean. Quantifying their impact on the spatiotemporal variability of the ocean carbon cycle is pivotal to understanding the distinctive characteristics of ocean basins dominated by riverine inflow. ECCO-Darwin is a data-constrained, global-ocean biogeochemistry model that has heretofore lacked lateral inputs of carbon and nutrients. The objective of this study is to add this new capability to ECCO-Darwin and to carry out a suite of sensitivity experiments in order to quantify the impact of these lateral fluxes on coastal- and open-ocean biogeochemistry. In this work, we use an optimized version of the data-assimilative global-ocean biogeochemistry ECCO-Darwin model to perform a sensitivity analysis of the ocean to lateral inputs of carbon and nutrients. We generate riverine inputs by combining daily point-source freshwater discharge from JRA55-do with the Global NEWS 2 watershed model, accounting for lateral inputs from 5171 watersheds worldwide. The addition of riverine inputs drives a small CO 2 outgassing ( + 0.02 Pg C yr −1 ) due to compensating processes at regional scales. In basins dominated by carbon runoff, such as the Tropical Atlantic and Arctic Oceans, the addition of riverine inputs increases CO 2 outgassing ( + 13 % and + 9 %, respectively). In contrast, runoff in nutrient-dominated Southeast Asia leads to increased CO 2 uptake ( + 9 %). This new riverine biogeochemical input capability will enable future ECCO-Darwin solutions to better capture key processes that occur along coastal margins in global oceans.
Document Type: text
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
DOI: 10.5194/egusphere-2025-1707
Availability: https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2025-1707; https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2025/egusphere-2025-1707/
Accession Number: edsbas.B1B66725
Database: BASE