coastal trapped waves
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

115
(FIVE YEARS 14)

H-INDEX

21
(FIVE YEARS 3)

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigue Anicet Imbol Koungue ◽  
Peter Brandt ◽  
Joke Lübbecke ◽  
Arthur Prigent ◽  
Meike Sena Martins ◽  
...  

High interannual sea surface temperature anomalies of more than 2°C were recorded along the coasts of Angola and Namibia between October 2019 and January 2020. This extreme coastal warm event that has been classified as a Benguela Niño, reached its peak amplitude in November 2019 in the Angola Benguela front region. In contrast to classical Benguela Niños, the 2019 Benguela Niño was generated by a combination of local and remote forcing. In September 2019, a local warming was triggered by positive anomalies of near coastal wind-stress curl leading to downwelling anomalies through Ekman dynamics off Southern Angola and by anomalously weak winds reducing the latent heat loss by the ocean south of 15°S. In addition, downwelling coastal trapped waves were observed along the African coast between mid-October 2019 and early January 2020. Those coastal trapped waves might have partly emanated from the equatorial Atlantic as westerly wind anomalies were observed in the central and eastern equatorial Atlantic between end of September to early December 2019. Additional forcing for the downwelling coastal trapped waves likely resulted from an observed weakening of the prevailing coastal southerly winds along the Angolan coast north of 15°S between October 2019 and mid-February 2020. During the peak of the event, latent heat flux damped the sea surface temperature anomalies mostly in the Angola Benguela front region. In the eastern equatorial Atlantic, relaxation of cross-equatorial southerly winds might have contributed to the equatorial warming in November 2019 during the peak of the 2019 Benguela Niño. Moreover, for the first time, moored velocities off Angola (11°S) revealed a coherent poleward flow in the upper 100 m in October and November 2019 suggesting a contribution of meridional heat advection to the near-surface warming during the early stages of the Benguela Niño. During the Benguela Niño, a reduction of net primary production in the Southern Angola and Angola Benguela front regions was observed.


2021 ◽  
pp. 104496
Author(s):  
Pedro Paulo de Freitas ◽  
Afonso de Moraes Paiva ◽  
Mauro Cirano ◽  
Guilherme Nogueira Mill ◽  
Vladimir Santos Costa ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 336
Author(s):  
Stephanie K. Moore ◽  
John B. Mickett ◽  
Gregory J. Doucette ◽  
Nicolaus G. Adams ◽  
Christina M. Mikulski ◽  
...  

Efforts to identify in situ the mechanisms underpinning the response of harmful algae to climate change demand frequent observations in dynamic and often difficult to access marine and freshwater environments. Increasingly, resource managers and researchers are looking to fill this data gap using unmanned systems. In this study we integrated the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) into an autonomous platform to provide near real-time surveillance of harmful algae and the toxin domoic acid on the Washington State continental shelf over a three-year period (2016–2018). The ESP mooring design accommodated the necessary subsystems to sustain ESP operations, supporting deployment durations of up to 7.5 weeks. The combination of ESP observations and a suite of contextual measurements from the ESP mooring and a nearby surface buoy permitted an investigation into toxic Pseudo-nitzschia spp. bloom dynamics. Preliminary findings suggest a connection between bloom formation and nutrient availability that is modulated by wind-forced coastal-trapped waves. In addition, high concentrations of Pseudo-nitzschia spp. and elevated levels of domoic acid observed at the ESP mooring location were not necessarily associated with the advection of water from known bloom initiation sites. Such insights, made possible by this autonomous technology, enable the formulation of testable hypotheses on climate-driven changes in HAB dynamics that can be investigated during future deployments.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renske Gelderloos ◽  
Thomas W. N. Haine ◽  
Mattia Almansi

<p>Ocean currents along the Southeast Greenland Coast play an important role in North Atlantic circulation and the global climate system. They carry dense water over the Denmark Strait sill, fresh water from the Arctic and the Greenland Ice Sheet into the subpolar ocean, and warm Atlantic water into Greenland’s fjords, where it can interact with outlet glaciers. Observational evidence from the OSNAP array and other mooring records shows that the circulation in this region displays substantial subinertial variability, typically with periods of several days. For the dense water flowing over the Denmark Strait sill, this variability augments the time-mean transport; on the shelf, the variability is large enough to occasionally reverse the mean transport direction of the coastal current, highlighting the importance of characterizing this variability when interpreting synoptic surveys. In this study, we used the output of a high-resolution realistic simulation to diagnose and characterize subinertial variability in sea surface height and velocity along the coast. The results show that the subinertial signals on the shelf and along the shelf break are coherent over hundreds of kilometers, and consistent with Coastal Trapped Waves in two subinertial frequency bands—at periods of 1–3 days and 5–18 days—portraying a combination of Mode I and higher modes waves. Furthermore, we find that northeasterly barrier winds may trigger the 5–18 day shelf waves, whereas the 1–3 day variability is linked to high wind speeds over Sermilik Deep.</p>


Author(s):  
Renske Gelderloos ◽  
Thomas W. N. Haine ◽  
Mattia Almansi

AbstractOcean currents along the Southeast Greenland Coast play an important role in the climate system. They carry dense water over the Denmark Strait sill, fresh water from the Arctic and the Greenland Ice Sheet into the subpolar ocean, and warm Atlantic water into Greenland’s fjords, where it can interact with outlet glaciers. Observational evidence from moorings shows that the circulation in this region displays substantial subinertial variability (typically with periods of several days). For the dense water flowing over the Denmark Strait sill, this variability augments the time-mean transport. It has been suggested that the subinertial variability found in observations is associated with Coastal Trapped Waves, whose properties depend on bathymetry, stratification, and the mean flow. Here, we use the output of a high-resolution realistic simulation to diagnose and characterize subinertial variability in sea surface height and velocity along the coast. The results show that the subinertial signals are coherent over hundreds of kilometers along the shelf. We find Coastal Trapped Waves on the shelf and along the shelf break in two subinertial frequency bands—at periods of 1–3 days and 5–18 days—that are consistent with a combination of Mode I waves and higher modes. Furthermore, we find that northeasterly barrier winds may trigger the 5–18 day shelf waves, whereas the 1–3 day variability is linked to high wind speeds over Sermilik Deep.


2019 ◽  
Vol 49 (7) ◽  
pp. 1973-1994 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamara L. Schlosser ◽  
Nicole L. Jones ◽  
Ruth C. Musgrave ◽  
Cynthia E. Bluteau ◽  
Gregory N. Ivey ◽  
...  

AbstractUsing 18 days of field observations, we investigate the diurnal (D1) frequency wave dynamics on the Tasmanian eastern continental shelf. At this latitude, the D1 frequency is subinertial and separable from the highly energetic near-inertial motion. We use a linear coastal-trapped wave (CTW) solution with the observed background current, stratification, and shelf bathymetry to determine the modal structure of the first three resonant CTWs. We associate the observed D1 velocity with a superimposed mode-zero and mode-one CTW, with mode one dominating mode zero. Both the observed and mode-one D1 velocity was intensified near the thermocline, with stronger velocities occurring when the thermocline stratification was stronger and/or the thermocline was deeper (up to the shelfbreak depth). The CTW modal structure and amplitude varied with the background stratification and alongshore current, with no spring–neap relationship evident for the observed 18 days. Within the surface and bottom Ekman layers on the shelf, the observed velocity phase changed in the cross-shelf and/or vertical directions, inconsistent with an alongshore propagating CTW. In the near-surface and near-bottom regions, the linear CTW solution also did not match the observed velocity, particularly within the bottom Ekman layer. Boundary layer processes were likely causing this observed inconsistency with linear CTW theory. As linear CTW solutions have an idealized representation of boundary dynamics, they should be cautiously applied on the shelf.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1467-1492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris W. Hughes ◽  
Ichiro Fukumori ◽  
Stephen M. Griffies ◽  
John M. Huthnance ◽  
Shoshiro Minobe ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document