Not exact matches
Chatterjee et al 2017 (http://science.sciencemag.org/content/358/6360/eaam5776) in the current issue of Science used OCO - 2 and in - situ data to show that El Nino
event reduced
outgassing of CO2 from tropical east Pacific in 2015, leading to anomalous sink.
These are the kinds of very complex space weather discussions that need to occur, and at the end of the day CO2 is DEPENDANT on these solar
events as CO2 is ELECTRICAL from a conductivity standpoint in the oceans, connected to surface lows and
outgassing and ocean surface ion counts.
Or would melting of most of the cryosphere (given this input of just enough warming to cause that) ensure that we go into a long term extreme warming hysteresis
event, leading to perhaps hydrogen sulfide
outgassing and massive extinction?
During these
events, the anoxic oceans
outgassed enough toxic hydrogen sulfide to cause varying sizes of mass extinctions of marine and terrestrial life.
The net impact of the 2015 — 2016 El Niño
event on the global carbon cycle is an increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations, which would likely be larger if it were not for the reduction in
outgassing from the ocean.