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Published March 19, 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Balance and imbalance in biogeochemical cycles reflect the operation of closed, exchange, and open sets

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Biogeochemical reactions modulate the chemical composition of the oceans and atmosphere, providing feedbacks that sustain planetary habitability over geological time. Here, we mathematically evaluate a suite of biogeochemical processes to identify combinations of reactions that stabilize atmospheric carbon dioxide by balancing fluxes of chemical species among the ocean, atmosphere, and geosphere. Unlike prior modeling efforts, this approach does not prescribe functional relationships between the rates of biogeochemical processes and environmental conditions. Our agnostic framework generates three types of stable reaction combinations: closed sets, where sources and sinks mutually cancel for all chemical reservoirs; exchange sets, where constant ocean–atmosphere conditions are maintained through the growth or destruction of crustal reservoirs; and open sets, where balance in alkalinity and carbon fluxes is accommodated by changes in other chemical components of seawater or the atmosphere. These three modes of operation have different characteristic timescales and may leave distinct evidence in the rock record. To provide a practical example of this theoretical framework, we applied the model to recast existing hypotheses for Cenozoic climate change based on feedbacks or shared forcing mechanisms. Overall, this work provides a systematic and simplified conceptual framework for understanding the function and evolution of global biogeochemical cycles.

Copyright and License

© 2024 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND).

Acknowledgement

P.C.K. is supported through the TC Chamberlin Fellowship at the University of Chicago and through an NSF EAR postdoctoral fellowship (#2204376). Comments from two anonymous reviewers improved this manuscript.

Contributions

P.C.K. designed research; P.C.K. performed research; P.C.K., M.A.T, W.W.F., and C.L.B. analyzed data; M.A.T., W.W.F., and C.L.B. advised on project; P.C.K. wrote the first draft of the paper, while M.A.T., W.W.F., and C.L.B. helped with review and editing of the manuscript; and P.C.K., M.A.T., W.W.F., and C.L.B. wrote the paper.

Data Availability

No data were generated for this article. The mathematics that underly our results are solved in a set of MATLAB scripts archived through Zenodo (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10621255) (57) and available on GitHub (github.com/PrestonCosslettKemeny/biogeochemical_sets).

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no competing interest.

Files

kemeny-et-al-2024-balance-and-imbalance-in-biogeochemical-cycles-reflect-the-operation-of-closed-exchange-and-open-sets.pdf

Additional details

Created:
March 14, 2024
Modified:
March 14, 2024