Articles | Volume 5, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-5-55-2008
© Author(s) 2008. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-5-55-2008
© Author(s) 2008. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
On the treatment of particulate organic matter sinking in large-scale models of marine biogeochemical cycles
I. Kriest
IFM-GEOMAR, Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften an der Universität Kiel, Kiel, Germany
A. Oschlies
IFM-GEOMAR, Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften an der Universität Kiel, Kiel, Germany
Viewed
Total article views: 4,584 (including HTML, PDF, and XML)
Cumulative views and downloads
(calculated since 01 Feb 2013, article published on 28 Aug 2007)
| HTML | XML | Total | BibTeX | EndNote | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2,426 | 1,928 | 230 | 4,584 | 222 | 220 |
- HTML: 2,426
- PDF: 1,928
- XML: 230
- Total: 4,584
- BibTeX: 222
- EndNote: 220
Total article views: 3,878 (including HTML, PDF, and XML)
Cumulative views and downloads
(calculated since 01 Feb 2013, article published on 25 Jan 2008)
| HTML | XML | Total | BibTeX | EndNote | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2,175 | 1,518 | 185 | 3,878 | 202 | 216 |
- HTML: 2,175
- PDF: 1,518
- XML: 185
- Total: 3,878
- BibTeX: 202
- EndNote: 216
Total article views: 706 (including HTML, PDF, and XML)
Cumulative views and downloads
(calculated since 01 Feb 2013, article published on 28 Aug 2007)
| HTML | XML | Total | BibTeX | EndNote | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 251 | 410 | 45 | 706 | 20 | 4 |
- HTML: 251
- PDF: 410
- XML: 45
- Total: 706
- BibTeX: 20
- EndNote: 4
Cited
86 citations as recorded by crossref.
- Simulating aggregate dynamics in ocean biogeochemical models G. Jackson & A. Burd
- Evaluation of origin-depended nitrogen input through atmospheric deposition and its effect on primary production in coastal areas of western Kyusyu, Japan Y. Umezawa et al.
- Suspended particles are hotspots of microbial remineralization in the ocean's twilight zone V. Hemsley et al.
- Sensitivity analysis of simple global marine biogeochemical models I. Kriest et al.
- Anthropogenic Forcing of Carbonate and Organic Carbon Preservation in Marine Sediments R. Keil
- Environmental factors affecting the distribution of deep-water rose shrimp (Parapenaeus longirostris, Lucas, 1846) abundance in the Strait of Sicily (Mediterranean Sea) F. Bignami et al.
- Effects of sinking velocities and microbial respiration rates on the attenuation of particulate carbon fluxes through the mesopelagic zone A. McDonnell et al.
- Processes affecting dissolved iron across the Subtropical North Atlantic: a model study A. Pagnone et al.
- In Situ Particle Measurements Deemphasize the Role of Size in Governing the Sinking Velocity of Marine Particles J. Williams & S. Giering
- A new look at the multi-G model for organic carbon degradation in surface marine sediments for coupled benthic–pelagic simulations of the global ocean K. Stolpovsky et al.
- Variable particle size distributions reduce the sensitivity of global export flux to climate change S. Leung et al.
- Reviews and syntheses: parameter identification in marine planktonic ecosystem modelling M. Schartau et al.
- Autonomous profiling float observations reveal the dynamics of deep biomass distributions in the denitrifying oxygen minimum zone of the Arabian Sea B. Wojtasiewicz et al.
- Evaluation of NorESM-OC (versions 1 and 1.2), the ocean carbon-cycle stand-alone configuration of the Norwegian Earth System Model (NorESM1) J. Schwinger et al.
- Biological carbon pump estimate based on multidecadal hydrographic data W. Wang et al.
- Influence of Seasonal Variability in Flux Attenuation on Global Organic Carbon Fluxes and Nutrient Distributions F. de Melo Viríssimo et al.
- Phytoplankton as a principal diet for callianassid shrimp larvae in coastal waters, estimated from laboratory rearing and stable isotope analysis Y. Umezawa et al.
- A Bayesian statistical approach to inferring particle dynamics from in-situ pump POC and chloropigment data from the Mediterranean Sea W. Wang et al.
- MOPS-1.0: towards a model for the regulation of the global oceanic nitrogen budget by marine biogeochemical processes I. Kriest & A. Oschlies
- Microbes contribute to setting the ocean carbon flux by altering the fate of sinking particulates T. Nguyen et al.
- Regional impacts of iron-light colimitation in a global biogeochemical model E. Galbraith et al.
- Phytoplankton morphology controls on marine snow sinking velocity E. Laurenceau-Cornec et al.
- Modeling of 231Pa cycle and its implications on particle scavenging in the global ocean J. Meng & W. Wang
- The effect of marine aggregate parameterisations on nutrients and oxygen minimum zones in a global biogeochemical model D. Niemeyer et al.
- Seasonal variations of sinking velocities in Austral diatom blooms: Lessons learned from COMICS M. Villa-Alfageme et al.
- Limits of our knowledge, part 2: Selected frontiers in marine organic biogeochemistry S. Wakeham & C. Lee
- Seasonal variability of the carbon export in the central South China Sea W. Ma et al.
- Uncertain response of ocean biological carbon export in a changing world S. Henson et al.
- Simple Eulerian–Lagrangian approach to solving equations for sinking particulate organic matter in the ocean V. Maderich et al.
- Where and When the Mesopelagic Carbon Budget Balances, if at All S. Oliver et al.
- Assessment of transparent exopolymer particles in the Arctic Ocean implemented into the coupled ocean–sea ice–biogeochemistry model FESOM2.1–REcoM3 M. Zeising et al.
- Estimating global biomass and biogeochemical cycling of marine fish with and without fishing D. Bianchi et al.
- Carbon Export in the Ocean: A Biologist's Perspective M. Iversen
- Atmospheric deposition of nutrients and excess N formation in the North Atlantic L. Zamora et al.
- A novel statistical analysis of chloropigment fluxes to constrain particle exchange and organic matter remineralization rate constants in the Mediterranean Sea W. Wang et al.
- Geographical, seasonal, and depth variation in sinking particle speeds in the North Atlantic M. Villa‐Alfageme et al.
- Nutrient cycling in the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary: Response to environmental perturbations M. Jutras et al.
- Impact of particle aggregation on vertical fluxes of organic matter G. Karakaş et al.
- Sensitivity of atmospheric CO2 to regional variability in particulate organic matter remineralization depths J. Wilson et al.
- Hydrodynamic loading of perforated disks in creeping flows E. Strong et al.
- Calibrating a global three-dimensional biogeochemical ocean model (MOPS-1.0) I. Kriest et al.
- Sinking flux of particulate organic matter in the oceans: Sensitivity to particle characteristics M. Omand et al.
- Reconciling the Size‐Dependence of Marine Particle Sinking Speed B. Cael et al.
- Impact of Remineralization Profile Shape on the Air‐Sea Carbon Balance J. Lauderdale & B. Cael
- Numerical effects on organic-matter sedimentation and remineralization in biogeochemical ocean models I. Kriest & A. Oschlies
- Inverse-model estimates of the ocean's coupled phosphorus, silicon, and iron cycles B. Pasquier & M. Holzer
- Assessing the sensitivity of modeled air‐sea CO2 exchange to the remineralization depth of particulate organic and inorganic carbon B. Schneider et al.
- Ocean biogeochemistry in the Norwegian Earth System Model version 2 (NorESM2) J. Tjiputra et al.
- Ocean state estimation from hydrography and velocity observations during EIFEX with a regional biogeochemical ocean circulation model M. Losch et al.
- Modelling Mediterranean ocean biogeochemistry of the Last Glacial Maximum K. Six et al.
- Marine Ecosystem Dynamics and Biogeochemical Cycling in the Community Earth System Model [CESM1(BGC)]: Comparison of the 1990s with the 2090s under the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 Scenarios J. Moore et al.
- Wind Synoptic Activity Increases Oxygen Levels in the Tropical Pacific Ocean O. Duteil
- Incorporating the stable carbon isotope 13C in the ocean biogeochemical component of the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model B. Liu et al.
- FOCI-MOPS v1 – integration of marine biogeochemistry within the Flexible Ocean and Climate Infrastructure version 1 (FOCI 1) Earth system model C. Chien et al.
- Microstructure and composition of marine aggregates as co-determinants for vertical particulate organic carbon transfer in the global ocean J. Maerz et al.
- Spatiotemporal variability in benthic-pelagic coupling on the Oregon-Washington shelf A. Hughes et al.
- Responses of ocean biogeochemistry to atmospheric supply of lithogenic and pyrogenic iron-containing aerosols A. Ito et al.
- Sinking rates and ballast composition of particles in the Atlantic Ocean: implications for the organic carbon fluxes to the deep ocean G. Fischer & G. Karakaş
- Projected decreases in future marine export production: the role of the carbon flux through the upper ocean ecosystem C. Laufkötter et al.
- Hidden comet tails of marine snow impede ocean-based carbon sequestration R. Chajwa et al.
- One size fits all? Calibrating an ocean biogeochemistry model for different circulations I. Kriest et al.
- Formulation, optimization, and sensitivity of NitrOMZv1.0, a biogeochemical model of the nitrogen cycle in oceanic oxygen minimum zones D. Bianchi et al.
- Imprudent fishing harvests and consequent trophic cascades on the West Florida shelf over the last half century: A harbinger of increased human deaths from paralytic shellfish poisoning along the southeastern United States, in response to oligotrophication? J. Walsh et al.
- A skill assessment of the biogeochemical model REcoM2 coupled to the Finite Element Sea Ice–Ocean Model (FESOM 1.3) V. Schourup-Kristensen et al.
- Exploring the role of different data types and timescales in the quality of marine biogeochemical model calibration I. Kriest et al.
- Silicon Isotopes in an EMIC's Ocean: Sensitivity to Runoff, Iron Supply, and Climate H. Dietze et al.
- Biological and physical influences on marine snowfall at the equator R. Kiko et al.
- The Fate of Carbon and Nutrients Exported Out of the Southern Ocean J. Hauck et al.
- Modelling the role of marine particle on large scale 231Pa, 230Th, Iron and Aluminium distributions J. Dutay et al.
- On the Role of Dust‐Deposited Lithogenic Particles for Iron Cycling in the Tropical and Subtropical Atlantic Y. Ye & C. Völker
- Role of jellyfish in the plankton ecosystem revealed using a global ocean biogeochemical model R. Wright et al.
- Evaluating the Benefits of Bayesian Hierarchical Methods for Analyzing Heterogeneous Environmental Datasets: A Case Study of Marine Organic Carbon Fluxes G. Britten et al.
- Global-scale carbon and energy flows through the marine planktonic food web: An analysis with a coupled physical–biological model C. Stock et al.
- 234Th‐Derived Particle Fluxes and Seasonal Variability: When Is the SS Assumption Reliable? Insights From a Novel Approach for Carbon Flux Simulation E. Ceballos‐Romero et al.
- Modeling the Vertical Flux of Organic Carbon in the Global Ocean A. Burd
- New guidelines for the application of Stokes' models to the sinking velocity of marine aggregates E. Laurenceau‐Cornec et al.
- Strong particle dynamics counteract the nutrient-pumping effect leading to weak carbon flux in a cyclonic eddy X. Zhu et al.
- Ocean biogeochemistry in the coupled ocean–sea ice–biogeochemistry model FESOM2.1–REcoM3 Ö. Gürses et al.
- Impact of mesoscale eddies on the source funnel of sediment trap measurements in the South China Sea W. Ma et al.
- Terrestrial and marine perspectives on modeling organic matter degradation pathways A. Burd et al.
- Marine particles and their remineralization buffer future ocean biogeochemistry response to climate warming J. Maerz et al.
- The organic carbon pump in the Atlantic A. Omta et al.
- Towards an assessment of simple global marine biogeochemical models of different complexity I. Kriest et al.
- A revised global estimate of dissolved iron fluxes from marine sediments A. Dale et al.
- Simulating marine neodymium isotope distributions using Nd v1.0 coupled to the ocean component of the FAMOUS–MOSES1 climate model: sensitivities to reversible scavenging efficiency and benthic source distributions S. Robinson et al.
- A mechanistic particle flux model applied to the oceanic phosphorus cycle T. DeVries et al.
86 citations as recorded by crossref.
- Simulating aggregate dynamics in ocean biogeochemical models G. Jackson & A. Burd
- Evaluation of origin-depended nitrogen input through atmospheric deposition and its effect on primary production in coastal areas of western Kyusyu, Japan Y. Umezawa et al.
- Suspended particles are hotspots of microbial remineralization in the ocean's twilight zone V. Hemsley et al.
- Sensitivity analysis of simple global marine biogeochemical models I. Kriest et al.
- Anthropogenic Forcing of Carbonate and Organic Carbon Preservation in Marine Sediments R. Keil
- Environmental factors affecting the distribution of deep-water rose shrimp (Parapenaeus longirostris, Lucas, 1846) abundance in the Strait of Sicily (Mediterranean Sea) F. Bignami et al.
- Effects of sinking velocities and microbial respiration rates on the attenuation of particulate carbon fluxes through the mesopelagic zone A. McDonnell et al.
- Processes affecting dissolved iron across the Subtropical North Atlantic: a model study A. Pagnone et al.
- In Situ Particle Measurements Deemphasize the Role of Size in Governing the Sinking Velocity of Marine Particles J. Williams & S. Giering
- A new look at the multi-G model for organic carbon degradation in surface marine sediments for coupled benthic–pelagic simulations of the global ocean K. Stolpovsky et al.
- Variable particle size distributions reduce the sensitivity of global export flux to climate change S. Leung et al.
- Reviews and syntheses: parameter identification in marine planktonic ecosystem modelling M. Schartau et al.
- Autonomous profiling float observations reveal the dynamics of deep biomass distributions in the denitrifying oxygen minimum zone of the Arabian Sea B. Wojtasiewicz et al.
- Evaluation of NorESM-OC (versions 1 and 1.2), the ocean carbon-cycle stand-alone configuration of the Norwegian Earth System Model (NorESM1) J. Schwinger et al.
- Biological carbon pump estimate based on multidecadal hydrographic data W. Wang et al.
- Influence of Seasonal Variability in Flux Attenuation on Global Organic Carbon Fluxes and Nutrient Distributions F. de Melo Viríssimo et al.
- Phytoplankton as a principal diet for callianassid shrimp larvae in coastal waters, estimated from laboratory rearing and stable isotope analysis Y. Umezawa et al.
- A Bayesian statistical approach to inferring particle dynamics from in-situ pump POC and chloropigment data from the Mediterranean Sea W. Wang et al.
- MOPS-1.0: towards a model for the regulation of the global oceanic nitrogen budget by marine biogeochemical processes I. Kriest & A. Oschlies
- Microbes contribute to setting the ocean carbon flux by altering the fate of sinking particulates T. Nguyen et al.
- Regional impacts of iron-light colimitation in a global biogeochemical model E. Galbraith et al.
- Phytoplankton morphology controls on marine snow sinking velocity E. Laurenceau-Cornec et al.
- Modeling of 231Pa cycle and its implications on particle scavenging in the global ocean J. Meng & W. Wang
- The effect of marine aggregate parameterisations on nutrients and oxygen minimum zones in a global biogeochemical model D. Niemeyer et al.
- Seasonal variations of sinking velocities in Austral diatom blooms: Lessons learned from COMICS M. Villa-Alfageme et al.
- Limits of our knowledge, part 2: Selected frontiers in marine organic biogeochemistry S. Wakeham & C. Lee
- Seasonal variability of the carbon export in the central South China Sea W. Ma et al.
- Uncertain response of ocean biological carbon export in a changing world S. Henson et al.
- Simple Eulerian–Lagrangian approach to solving equations for sinking particulate organic matter in the ocean V. Maderich et al.
- Where and When the Mesopelagic Carbon Budget Balances, if at All S. Oliver et al.
- Assessment of transparent exopolymer particles in the Arctic Ocean implemented into the coupled ocean–sea ice–biogeochemistry model FESOM2.1–REcoM3 M. Zeising et al.
- Estimating global biomass and biogeochemical cycling of marine fish with and without fishing D. Bianchi et al.
- Carbon Export in the Ocean: A Biologist's Perspective M. Iversen
- Atmospheric deposition of nutrients and excess N formation in the North Atlantic L. Zamora et al.
- A novel statistical analysis of chloropigment fluxes to constrain particle exchange and organic matter remineralization rate constants in the Mediterranean Sea W. Wang et al.
- Geographical, seasonal, and depth variation in sinking particle speeds in the North Atlantic M. Villa‐Alfageme et al.
- Nutrient cycling in the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary: Response to environmental perturbations M. Jutras et al.
- Impact of particle aggregation on vertical fluxes of organic matter G. Karakaş et al.
- Sensitivity of atmospheric CO2 to regional variability in particulate organic matter remineralization depths J. Wilson et al.
- Hydrodynamic loading of perforated disks in creeping flows E. Strong et al.
- Calibrating a global three-dimensional biogeochemical ocean model (MOPS-1.0) I. Kriest et al.
- Sinking flux of particulate organic matter in the oceans: Sensitivity to particle characteristics M. Omand et al.
- Reconciling the Size‐Dependence of Marine Particle Sinking Speed B. Cael et al.
- Impact of Remineralization Profile Shape on the Air‐Sea Carbon Balance J. Lauderdale & B. Cael
- Numerical effects on organic-matter sedimentation and remineralization in biogeochemical ocean models I. Kriest & A. Oschlies
- Inverse-model estimates of the ocean's coupled phosphorus, silicon, and iron cycles B. Pasquier & M. Holzer
- Assessing the sensitivity of modeled air‐sea CO2 exchange to the remineralization depth of particulate organic and inorganic carbon B. Schneider et al.
- Ocean biogeochemistry in the Norwegian Earth System Model version 2 (NorESM2) J. Tjiputra et al.
- Ocean state estimation from hydrography and velocity observations during EIFEX with a regional biogeochemical ocean circulation model M. Losch et al.
- Modelling Mediterranean ocean biogeochemistry of the Last Glacial Maximum K. Six et al.
- Marine Ecosystem Dynamics and Biogeochemical Cycling in the Community Earth System Model [CESM1(BGC)]: Comparison of the 1990s with the 2090s under the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 Scenarios J. Moore et al.
- Wind Synoptic Activity Increases Oxygen Levels in the Tropical Pacific Ocean O. Duteil
- Incorporating the stable carbon isotope 13C in the ocean biogeochemical component of the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model B. Liu et al.
- FOCI-MOPS v1 – integration of marine biogeochemistry within the Flexible Ocean and Climate Infrastructure version 1 (FOCI 1) Earth system model C. Chien et al.
- Microstructure and composition of marine aggregates as co-determinants for vertical particulate organic carbon transfer in the global ocean J. Maerz et al.
- Spatiotemporal variability in benthic-pelagic coupling on the Oregon-Washington shelf A. Hughes et al.
- Responses of ocean biogeochemistry to atmospheric supply of lithogenic and pyrogenic iron-containing aerosols A. Ito et al.
- Sinking rates and ballast composition of particles in the Atlantic Ocean: implications for the organic carbon fluxes to the deep ocean G. Fischer & G. Karakaş
- Projected decreases in future marine export production: the role of the carbon flux through the upper ocean ecosystem C. Laufkötter et al.
- Hidden comet tails of marine snow impede ocean-based carbon sequestration R. Chajwa et al.
- One size fits all? Calibrating an ocean biogeochemistry model for different circulations I. Kriest et al.
- Formulation, optimization, and sensitivity of NitrOMZv1.0, a biogeochemical model of the nitrogen cycle in oceanic oxygen minimum zones D. Bianchi et al.
- Imprudent fishing harvests and consequent trophic cascades on the West Florida shelf over the last half century: A harbinger of increased human deaths from paralytic shellfish poisoning along the southeastern United States, in response to oligotrophication? J. Walsh et al.
- A skill assessment of the biogeochemical model REcoM2 coupled to the Finite Element Sea Ice–Ocean Model (FESOM 1.3) V. Schourup-Kristensen et al.
- Exploring the role of different data types and timescales in the quality of marine biogeochemical model calibration I. Kriest et al.
- Silicon Isotopes in an EMIC's Ocean: Sensitivity to Runoff, Iron Supply, and Climate H. Dietze et al.
- Biological and physical influences on marine snowfall at the equator R. Kiko et al.
- The Fate of Carbon and Nutrients Exported Out of the Southern Ocean J. Hauck et al.
- Modelling the role of marine particle on large scale 231Pa, 230Th, Iron and Aluminium distributions J. Dutay et al.
- On the Role of Dust‐Deposited Lithogenic Particles for Iron Cycling in the Tropical and Subtropical Atlantic Y. Ye & C. Völker
- Role of jellyfish in the plankton ecosystem revealed using a global ocean biogeochemical model R. Wright et al.
- Evaluating the Benefits of Bayesian Hierarchical Methods for Analyzing Heterogeneous Environmental Datasets: A Case Study of Marine Organic Carbon Fluxes G. Britten et al.
- Global-scale carbon and energy flows through the marine planktonic food web: An analysis with a coupled physical–biological model C. Stock et al.
- 234Th‐Derived Particle Fluxes and Seasonal Variability: When Is the SS Assumption Reliable? Insights From a Novel Approach for Carbon Flux Simulation E. Ceballos‐Romero et al.
- Modeling the Vertical Flux of Organic Carbon in the Global Ocean A. Burd
- New guidelines for the application of Stokes' models to the sinking velocity of marine aggregates E. Laurenceau‐Cornec et al.
- Strong particle dynamics counteract the nutrient-pumping effect leading to weak carbon flux in a cyclonic eddy X. Zhu et al.
- Ocean biogeochemistry in the coupled ocean–sea ice–biogeochemistry model FESOM2.1–REcoM3 Ö. Gürses et al.
- Impact of mesoscale eddies on the source funnel of sediment trap measurements in the South China Sea W. Ma et al.
- Terrestrial and marine perspectives on modeling organic matter degradation pathways A. Burd et al.
- Marine particles and their remineralization buffer future ocean biogeochemistry response to climate warming J. Maerz et al.
- The organic carbon pump in the Atlantic A. Omta et al.
- Towards an assessment of simple global marine biogeochemical models of different complexity I. Kriest et al.
- A revised global estimate of dissolved iron fluxes from marine sediments A. Dale et al.
- Simulating marine neodymium isotope distributions using Nd v1.0 coupled to the ocean component of the FAMOUS–MOSES1 climate model: sensitivities to reversible scavenging efficiency and benthic source distributions S. Robinson et al.
- A mechanistic particle flux model applied to the oceanic phosphorus cycle T. DeVries et al.
Saved (final revised paper)
Latest update: 26 Apr 2026