Abstract. Climate and marine biogeochemistry changes over the Holocene are investigated
based on transient global climate and biogeochemistry model simulations over
the last 9500 years. The simulations are forced by accelerated and
non-accelerated orbital parameters, respectively, and atmospheric
pCO2, CH4, and N2O. The analysis focusses on key
climatic parameters of relevance to the marine biogeochemistry, and on the
physical and biogeochemical processes that drive atmosphere–ocean carbon
fluxes and changes in the oxygen minimum zones (OMZs). The simulated global
mean ocean temperature is characterized by a mid-Holocene cooling and a late Holocene warming, a common
feature among Holocene climate simulations which, however, contradicts a
proxy-derived mid-Holocene climate optimum. As the most significant result,
and only in the non-accelerated simulation, we find a substantial increase in
volume of the OMZ in the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) continuing into the
late Holocene. The concurrent increase in apparent oxygen utilization (AOU)
and age of the water mass within the EEP OMZ can be attributed to a weakening
of the deep northward inflow into the Pacific. This results in a large-scale
mid-to-late Holocene increase in AOU in most of the Pacific and hence the
source regions of the EEP OMZ waters. The simulated expansion of the EEP OMZ
raises the question of whether the deoxygenation that has been observed over
the last 5 decades could be a – perhaps accelerated – continuation of an
orbitally driven decline in oxygen. Changes in global mean biological
production and export of detritus remain of the order of 10 %, with
generally lower values in the mid-Holocene. The simulated atmosphere–ocean
CO2 flux would result in atmospheric pCO2 changes of
similar magnitudes to those observed for the Holocene, but with different
timing. More technically, as the increase in EEP OMZ volume can only be
simulated with the non-accelerated model simulation, non-accelerated model
simulations are required for an analysis of the marine biogeochemistry in the
Holocene. Notably, the long control experiment also displays similar
magnitude variability to the transient experiment for some parameters. This
indicates that also long control runs are required when investigating
Holocene climate and marine biogeochemistry, and that some of the Holocene
variations could be attributed to internal variability of the
atmosphere–ocean system.