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Paridhi Rustogi

and 4 more

High-frequency wind speed and wave variability influence the air-sea CO2 flux by modulating the gas transfer velocity. Traditional gas transfer velocity formulations scale solely with wind speed and ignore wave activity, including wave breaking and bubble-mediated transfers. In this study, we quantify the effects of wave-induced spatiotemporal variability on the CO2 flux and the ocean carbon storage using a wind-wave-dependent gas transfer velocity formulation in an ocean general circulation model (MOM6-COBALTv2). We find that wave activity introduces a hemispheric asymmetry in ocean carbon storage, with gain in the southern hemisphere where wave activity is robust year-round and loss in the northern hemisphere where continental sheltering reduces carbon uptake. Compared to a traditional wind-dependent formulation, the wind-wave-dependent formulation yields a modest global increase in ocean carbon storage of 4.3 PgC over 1959-2018 (~4%), but on average, enhances the CO2 gas transfer velocity and flux variability by 5-30% on high-frequency and seasonal timescales in the extratropics and up to 200-300% during storms (>15 m s-1 wind speed). This wave-induced spatiotemporal variability in CO2 flux is comparable to the flux expected from marine carbon dioxide removal (mCDR) techniques, such that neglecting wind-wave variability in modeled CO2 fluxes could hinder distinguishing between natural variability and human-induced changes, undermining mCDR verification and monitoring efforts.