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  • Frontiers  (2)
  • Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union  (1)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2018. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Ocean Science 14 (2018): 731-750, doi:10.5194/os-14-731-2018.
    Description: The influence of mesoscale eddies on the flow field and the water masses, especially the oxygen distribution of the eastern tropical South Pacific, is investigated from a mooring, float, and satellite data set. Two anticyclonic (ACE1/2), one mode-water (MWE), and one cyclonic eddy (CE) are identified and followed in detail with satellite data on their westward transition with velocities of 3.2 to 6.0cms−1 from their generation region, the shelf of the Peruvian and Chilean upwelling regime, across the Stratus Ocean Reference Station (ORS;  ∼ 20°S, 85°W) to their decaying region far west in the oligotrophic open ocean. The ORS is located in the transition zone between the oxygen minimum zone and the well oxygenated South Pacific subtropical gyre. Velocity, hydrographic, and oxygen measurements at the mooring show the impact of eddies on the weak flow region of the eastern tropical South Pacific. Strong anomalies are related to the passage of eddies and are not associated with a seasonal signal in the open ocean. The mass transport of the four observed eddies across 85°W is between 1.1 and 1.8Sv. The eddy type-dependent available heat, salt, and oxygen anomalies are 8.1×1018J (ACE2), 1.0×1018J (MWE), and −8.9×1018J (CE) for heat; 25.2×1010kg (ACE2), −3.1×1010kg (MWE), and −41.5×1010kg (CE) for salt; and −3.6×1016µmol (ACE2), −3.5×1016µmol (MWE), and −6.5×1016µmol (CE) for oxygen showing a strong imbalance between anticyclones and cyclones for salt transports probably due to seasonal variability in water mass properties in the formation region of the eddies. Heat, salt, and oxygen fluxes out of the coastal region across the ORS region in the oligotrophic open South Pacific are estimated based on these eddy anomalies and on eddy statistics (gained out of 23 years of satellite data). Furthermore, four profiling floats were trapped in the ACE2 during its westward propagation between the formation region and the open ocean, which allows for conclusions on lateral mixing of water mass properties with time between the core of the eddy and the surrounding water. The strongest lateral mixing was found between the seasonal thermocline and the eddy core during the first half of the eddy lifetime.
    Description: Financial support was received through Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Robert A. Weller) and the GEOMAR (Rena Czeschel, Lothar Stramma, and Florian Schütte). The Stratus Ocean Reference Station is supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate Observation Program (NA09AR4320129, OAA CPO FundRef number 100007298).
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-02-09
    Description: Zooplankton organisms are a central part of pelagic ecosystems. They feed on all kinds of particulate matter and their egested fecal pellets contribute substantially to the passive sinking flux to depth. Some zooplankton species also conduct diel vertical migrations (DVMs) between the surface layer (where they feed at nighttime) and midwater depth (where they hide at daytime from predation). These DVMs cause the active export of organic and inorganic matter from the surface layer as zooplankton organisms excrete, defecate, respire, die, and are preyed upon at depth. In the Eastern Tropical North Atlantic (ETNA), the daytime distribution depth of many migrators (300–600 m) coincides with an expanding and intensifying oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). We here assess the day and night-time biomass distribution of mesozooplankton with an equivalent spherical diameter of 0.39–20 mm in three regions of the ETNA, calculate the DVM-mediated fluxes and compare these to particulate matter fluxes and other biogeochemical processes. Integrated mesozooplankton biomass in the ETNA region is about twice as high at a central OMZ location (cOMZ; 11° N, 21° W) compared to the Cape Verde Ocean Observatory (CVOO; 17.6° N, 24.3° W) and an oligotrophic location at 5° N, 23° W (5N). An Intermediate Particle Maximum (IPM) is particularly strong at cOMZ compared to the other regions. This IPM seems to be related to DVM activity. Zooplankton DVM was found to be responsible for about 31–41% of nitrogen loss from the upper 200m of the water column. Gut flux and mortality make up about 31% of particulate matter supply to the 300–600 m depth layer at cOMZ, whereas it makes up about 32% and 41% at CVOO and 5N, respectively. Resident and migrant zooplankton are responsible for about 7–27% of the total oxygen demand at 300–600 m depth. Changes in zooplankton abundance and migration behavior due to decreasing oxygen levels at midwater depth could therefore alter the elemental cycling of oxygen and carbon in the ETNA OMZ and impact the removal of nitrogen from the surface layer.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Major uncertainties in air-sea gas flux parameterizations may arise from a yet unpredictable sea surface microlayer (SML). Its influence on gas exchange is twofold as organic matter, in particular surfactants, on one side and organisms enriched in the SML on the other can alter air-sea gas fluxes. However, spatial heterogeneity of the SML and its potential consequences for gas exchange are not well understood. This study examines the SML’s surfactant pool and the dynamics of microbial enrichment across the sharp hydrological front of a newly upwelled filament off Mauritania. The front was marked by a distinct decrease in temperature and salinity compared to the stratified water column outside the filament. Distinct chemical and microbial SML properties were observed and associated with the filament. Overall, organic matter in the SML was significantly higher concentrated inside the filament and in equivalence to the underlying water. Degradation indices derived from total amino acids (TAA) composition indicated production of fresh organic matter inside and increased degradation outside the filament. Moreover, a shift in the microbial community was observed, for instance Synechococcus spp. prevailed outside the filament. Autotrophic and heterotrophic microorganisms preferably colonized the SML outside the filament. Organic matter enrichment in the SML depended largely on the chemical nature of biomolecules. Total organic carbon (TOC), total nitrogen and total combined carbohydrates were only slightly enriched while glucose, TAA and surfactants were considerably enriched in the SML. Surfactant concentration was positively correlated to TAA, in particular to arginine and glutamic acid, indicating that fresh organic matter components enhanced surface activity. Further, TOC and surfactant concentration correlated significantly (r2 = 0.47, p-value 〈 0.001). The lower limit of this linear correlation hits approximately the lowest TOC concentration expected within the global surface ocean. This suggests that surfactants are primarily derived from autochthonous production and most refractory components are excluded. Using a previously established relationship between surfactants and CO2 gas exchange (Pereira et al., 2018), we estimated that surfactants suppressed gas exchange by 12% inside the filament. This could be of relevance for freshly upwelled filaments, which are often supersaturated in greenhouse gases.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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