“…Despite the importance of the Indian Ocean in the global carbon cycle, this region is poorly studied with reference to the biogeochemical cycling of carbon compared to the other two major basins. The seasonal cycle of pCO 2 and carbon fluxes was studied only in the Arabian Sea (Chakraborty et al, 2021;De Verneil et al, 2022;George et al, 1994;Goyet et al, 1998;Sarma et al, 1998Sarma et al, , 2003Sarma et al, , 2013, the BoB (Chakraborty et al, 2021;Sarma et al, 2012Sarma et al, , 2015Sarma et al, , 2020Sarma, Krishna, et al, 2021) and the south-western Indian ocean (Metzl et al, 1998) whereas the long-term variability was only recently studied in the southwestern Indian Ocean region (Metzl et al, 2022) as the other regions in the Indian Ocean was either sampled once or twice during last few decades (Sarma et al, 2013;Takahashi et al, 2009). The studies carried out in the aegis of the Joint Global Flux Study (JGOFS) and the Bay of Bengal Process Studies (BoBPS) suggested that the seasonal amplitude of pCO 2 goes beyond 200 μatm in the Arabian Sea (George et al, 1994;Goyet et al, 1998;Sarma et al, 1998Sarma et al, , 2003 and BoB (Kumar et al, 1996;Sarma et al, 2012Sarma et al, , 2015Sarma et al, , 2019.…”