scholarly journals Monthly variability in upper ocean biogeochemistry due to mesoscale eddy activity in the Saragasso Sea

Author(s):  
Erin N. Sweeney
2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 3521-3566 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. A. Caldeira ◽  
X. Couvelard ◽  
E. Casella ◽  
A. Vetrano

Abstract. A high-resolution ocean circulation modelling system forced with a high-resolution numerical wind product was used to study the mesoscale and sub-mesoscale eddy population of the North-Western Mediterranean Sea, contrasting eddy-activity between the Tyrrhenian and Ligurian sub-basins. Numerical solutions reproduced some of the known regional dynamics, namely the occurrence and oceanic implications of Mistral events, the convective cell leeward of the Gulf of Lion, as well as the Balearic frontal system. Calculated transport across the Corsica Channel followed a similar trend, when compared to the transport computed from a moored current meter. The analysis of the results showed that surface eddy activity is mostly confined to the boundary-currents, whereas in the deeper layers most eddies are concentrated on the central-deeper part of the basins. The Liguro-Provençal basin shows a much higher concentration of intermediate and deep-water eddies, when compared to the Tyrrhenian basin. Sub-mesoscale surface eddies tend to merge and migrate vertically onto intermediate waters. Intense eddy activity in the boundary-current surrounding the Liguro-Provençal Gyre, concentrate high-productivity, manifested by higher concentrations of mean sea surface chlorophyll, in the central part of the gyre, defined herein as the Ligurian Productive Pool (LPP). On average, the Tyrrhenian was mostly oligotrophic except for a small productive vortice in the south-eastern (leeward) side of Corsica. The transport in the Tyrrhenian Gyre, and across the basin is one order of magnitude higher than the transport calculated for the Liguro-Provençal basin. A high concentration of eddies in the passage between the Balearic Archipelago and Sardinia suggests retention and longer residence times of nutrient rich water in the "Ligurian pool", compared to a "fast draining" Tyrrhenian basin. Previous studies support the cyclonic gyre circulation generated in the Liguro-Provençal basin but more studies are needed to address the surface and deep mesoscale activity of the Tyrrhenian basin.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guidi Zhou ◽  
Xuhua Cheng

<p>The decadal variability of the Kuroshio Extension (KE) is investigated using altimeter observations (AVISO) and the output of an ocean model (OFES). It is shown that the KE decadal variability is manifested in its strength, latitudinal position, and zonal extent, as well as the associated mesoscale eddy activity. Two differences between the two datasets are identified: (a) In OFES, the eddy activity positively correlates with the KE mode index when it leads by a few years, whereas in AVISO the two are negatively and concurrently correlated. (b) In OFES, the positive KE mode is associated with large meanders of the Kuroshio south of Japan, but in AVISO they are irrelevant. These differences indicate that the generation mechanism of KE's decadal variability is different in OFES and the real ocean. The sea surface height anomaly (SSHA) is then decomposed into major components including the wind-driven Rossby waves and residual (intrinsic) variability. The relationship between the two components are virtually the same in OFES and in AVISO, showing a negative correlation when the wind-driven part leads by a few years. Further diagnostics based on OFES reveals that the residual SSHA originates from the downstream region over the Shatsky Rise, slowly propagates westward, and is driven by eddy potential energy transfer. The OFES results partly conform to the intrinsic relaxation oscillation theory put forth by idealized model analyses, but in the latter the SSHA signal originates from the upstream Kuroshio. A new mechanism is then proposed for OFES: the decadal variability of the KE is first a result of the intrinsic relaxation oscillation probably excited by wind forcing, which regulates the strength of the KE’s inflow and thus modulates the downstream topography interaction, resulting in different downstream mesoscale eddy activity that further feeds back on the mean-flow. The mechanism for the real ocean is also reassessed.</p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 657-665 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fan Jia ◽  
Lixin Wu ◽  
Bo Qiu

Abstract Mesoscale eddy activity in the southeast Indian Ocean (15°–30°S, 60°–110°E) is investigated based on available satellite altimetry observations. The observed sea level anomaly data show that this region is the only eastern basin among the global oceans where strong eddy activity exists. Furthermore, the eddy kinetic energy (EKE) level in this region displays a distinct seasonal cycle with the maximum in austral summer and minimum in austral winter. It is found that this seasonal modulation of EKE is mediated by baroclinic instability associated with the surface-intensified South Indian Countercurrent (SICC) and the underlying South Equatorial Current (SEC) system. In austral spring and summer the enhanced flux forcing of combined meridional Ekman and geostrophic convergence strengthens the upper-ocean meridional temperature gradient, intensifying the SICC front and its vertical velocity shear. Modulation of the vertical velocity shear results in the seasonal changes in the strength of baroclinic instability, leading to the seasonal EKE variations in the southeast Indian Ocean.


Atmosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 792
Author(s):  
Peilong Yu ◽  
Chao Zhang ◽  
Lifeng Zhang ◽  
Xiong Chen ◽  
Quanjia Zhong ◽  
...  

Using high-resolution satellite-derived sea surface temperature (SST) data from September 1981 to December 2015, the present study develops a new index to detect the long-term variation in mesoscale eddy activity over the Kuroshio Extension (KE) region. This eddy activity index (EAI) highlights the strength of eddy-induced poleward heat transport and has obvious advantages over the other existing KE indices in depicting the low-frequency changes in KE eddy activity. An analysis of the EAI shows that over the long term, the KE eddy activity variability presents a significant spectral peak of about 8 years and is not directly modulated by wind-driven oceanic Rossby waves generated in the central North Pacific. When the EAI is positive, the strengthened KE eddy activity significantly enhances the heat release from ocean to atmosphere over the Kuroshio–Oyashio confluence region (KOCR). This induces an anomalous dipole pattern of near-surface baroclinicity over this region that can persist for up to 6 months, favoring a weakened and northward-moving East Asian jet, and vice versa. It is believed that the new EAI will facilitate future studies focusing on the climatic effects of the KE eddy activity variation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (9) ◽  
pp. 2475-2490
Author(s):  
Xuan Shan ◽  
Zhao Jing ◽  
Bingrong Sun ◽  
Ping Chang ◽  
Lixin Wu ◽  
...  

AbstractThe ocean mesoscale eddy–atmosphere (OME-A) interaction through the eddy-induced sea surface temperature anomaly can feedback on ocean dynamics in various ways (referred to as the OME-A thermal feedback). In this study, the influence of the OME-A thermal feedback on the upper-ocean haline structure is analyzed based on high-resolution coupled simulations. In the Oyashio Extension where pronounced surface temperature and salinity fronts are collocated, the haline stratification in the upper 200 m is significantly enhanced by the OME-A thermal feedback. This enhancement is mainly attributed to the weakening of the upward eddy salinity transport in response to the OME-A thermal feedback. The OME-A thermal feedback influences the vertical eddy salinity transport through its differed impacts on the mesoscale buoyancy and temperature anomaly variances. As temperature and salinity in the Oyashio Extension are strongly compensated for their effects on buoyancy, the dissipation of the mesoscale buoyancy anomaly variance b′2 by the OME-A thermal feedback is considerably weaker than that estimated from the mesoscale temperature anomaly alone, i.e., (gαT′)2, with g the gravity acceleration and α the thermal expansion coefficient. Correspondingly, the vertical eddy buoyancy transport (w′b′) is weakened by the OME-A thermal feedback to a lesser extent than its thermal component (gαw′T′). The different responses of w′b′ and gαw′T′ to the OME-A thermal feedback are reconciled by the reduced vertical eddy salinity transport.


2008 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Capet ◽  
J. C. McWilliams ◽  
M. J. Molemaker ◽  
A. F. Shchepetkin

Abstract In computational simulations of an idealized subtropical eastern boundary upwelling current system, similar to the California Current, a submesoscale transition occurs in the eddy variability as the horizontal grid scale is reduced to O(1) km. This first paper (in a series of three) describes the transition in terms of the emergent flow structure and the associated time-averaged eddy fluxes. In addition to the mesoscale eddies that arise from a primary instability of the alongshore, wind-driven currents, significant energy is transferred into submesoscale fronts and vortices in the upper ocean. The submesoscale arises through surface frontogenesis growing off upwelled cold filaments that are pulled offshore and strained in between the mesoscale eddy centers. In turn, some submesoscale fronts become unstable and develop submesoscale meanders and fragment into roll-up vortices. Associated with this phenomenon are a large vertical vorticity and Rossby number, a large vertical velocity, relatively flat horizontal spectra (contrary to the prevailing view of mesoscale dynamics), a large vertical buoyancy flux acting to restratify the upper ocean, a submesoscale energy conversion from potential to kinetic, a significant spatial and temporal intermittency in the upper ocean, and material exchanges between the surface boundary layer and pycnocline. Comparison with available observations indicates that submesoscale fronts and instabilities occur widely in the upper ocean, with characteristics similar to the simulations.


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