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  • 1
    Keywords: Hochschulschrift
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (54 Blatt = 11 MB)
    Language: German
    Note: Zusammenfassung in deutscher und englischer Sprache
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-10-09
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
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    In:  (Bachelor thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel, Kiel, Germany, 54 pp
    Publication Date: 2016-05-04
    Keywords: Course of study: BSc Physics of the Earth System
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    In:  (Master thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel, Kiel, Germany, 88 pp
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Keywords: Course of study: MSc Climate Physics
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
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    In:  [Poster] In: PREFACE-PIRATA-CLIVAR-TAV Conference, 28.11.-02.12.2016, Paris, France .
    Publication Date: 2016-12-21
    Description: An extensive hydrographic dataset, compiled from public and previously unavailable archives, is used to quantify the physical processes contributing to the mixed layer heat and salinity budgets in the south eastern tropical Atlantic. This new climatology developed within the EU PREFACE project provides seasonal variations of mixed layer heat content and salinity. The surface heat and freshwater fluxes, horizontal advection from near-surface velocities, horizontal eddy advection, and vertical entrainment contributing to these variations are calculated for several subregions of the south eastern tropical Atlantic. The most important cooling is caused by zonal heat advection in the off-equatorial areas for the whole year. Eddy advection is an additional major heat flux and provides the largest annual mean heating in the Benguela upwelling system and further offshore but exhibits large seasonal variations closer to the equator. The surface heat flux is identified as the main driver of seasonal heat content variations due to the large annual cycle of short-wave radiation. Throughout the off-equatorial areas the evaporation is larger than precipitation and their combined impact on the mixed layer salinity is balanced by zonal freshwater advection. Especially in the eastern equatorial Atlantic other oceanic processes, like entrainment and probably vertical mixing, contribute to the mixed layer salinity budget, too. However, not all regional budgets are closed within the uncertainty, therefore additional not resolved processes like vertical mixing have to close the remaining residual. In contrast to the mixed layer heat budget that is dominated by surface fluxes, the mixed layer salinity budget is more strongly influenced by ocean processes.
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: July 01 – July 28, 2013 Fortaleza (Brazil) – Walvis Bay (Namibia)
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: The intraseasonal evolution of physical and biogeochemical properties during a coastal trapped wave event off central Peru is analysed using data from an extensive shipboard observational programme conducted between April and June 2017, and remote sensing data. The poleward velocities in the Peru–Chile Undercurrent were highly variable and strongly intensified to above 0.5 m s−1 between the middle and end of May. This intensification was likely caused by a first-baroclinic-mode downwelling coastal trapped wave, excited by a westerly wind anomaly at the Equator and originating at about 95∘ W. Local winds along the South American coast did not impact the wave. Although there is general agreement between the observed cross-shore-depth velocity structure of the coastal trapped wave and the velocity structure of first vertical mode solution of a linear wave model, there are differences in the details of the two flow distributions. The enhanced poleward flow increased water mass advection from the equatorial current system to the study site. The resulting shorter alongshore transit times between the Equator and the coast off central Peru led to a strong increase in nitrate concentrations, less anoxic water, likely less fixed nitrogen loss to N2 and a decrease of the nitrogen deficit compared to the situation before the poleward flow intensification. This study highlights the role of changes in the alongshore advection due to coastal trapped waves for the nutrient budget and the cumulative strength of N cycling in the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone. Enhanced availability of nitrate may impact a range of pelagic and benthic elemental cycles, as it represents a major electron acceptor for organic carbon degradation during denitrification and is involved in sulfide oxidation in sediments.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) show distinct biogeochemical processes that relate to microorganisms being able to thrive under low or even absent oxygen. Microbial degradation of organic matter is expected to be reduced in OMZs, although quantitative evidence is low. Here, we present heterotrophic bacterial production (3H leucine incorporation), extracellular enzyme rates (leucine aminopeptidase/β-glucosidase) and bacterial cell abundance for various in situ oxygen concentrations in the water column, including the upper and lower oxycline, of the eastern tropical South Pacific off Peru. Bacterial heterotrophic activity in the suboxic core of the OMZ (at in situ ≤ 5 µmol O2 kg−1) ranged from 0.3 to 281 µmol C m−3 d−1 and was not significantly lower than in waters of 5–60 µmol O2 kg−1. Moreover, bacterial abundance in the OMZ and leucine aminopeptidase activity were significantly higher in suboxic waters compared to waters of 5–60 µmol O2 kg−1, suggesting no impairment of bacterial organic-matter degradation in the core of the OMZ. Nevertheless, high cell-specific bacterial production was observed in samples from oxyclines, and cell-specific extracellular enzyme rates were especially high at the lower oxycline, corroborating earlier findings of highly active and distinct micro-aerobic bacterial communities. To assess the impact of bacterial degradation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) for oxygen loss in the Peruvian OMZ, we compared diapycnal fluxes of oxygen and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and their microbial uptake within the upper 60 m of the water column. Our data indicate low bacterial growth efficiencies of 1 %–21 % at the upper oxycline, resulting in a high bacterial oxygen demand that can explain up to 33 % of the observed average oxygen loss over depth. Our study therewith shows that microbial degradation of DOM has a considerable share in sustaining the OMZ off Peru.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: The eastern boundary region of the southeastern Pacific Ocean hosts one of the world's most dynamic and productive upwelling systems with an associated oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). The variability in downward export fluxes in this region, with strongly varying surface productivity, upwelling intensities and water column oxygen content, is however poorly understood. Thorium-234 (234Th) is a powerful tracer to study the dynamics of export fluxes of carbon and other elements, yet intense advection and diffusion in nearshore environments impact the assessment of depth-integrated 234Th fluxes when not properly evaluated. Here we use vessel-mounted acoustic Doppler current profiler (VmADCP) current velocities, satellite wind speed and in situ microstructure measurements to determine the magnitude of advective and diffusive fluxes over the entire 234Th flux budget at 25 stations from 11 to 16∘ S in the Peruvian OMZ. Contrary to findings along the GEOTRACES P16 eastern section, our results showed that weak surface wind speed during our cruises induced low upwelling rates and minimal upwelled 234Th fluxes, whereas vertical diffusive 234Th fluxes were important only at a few shallow shelf stations. Horizontal advective and diffusive 234Th fluxes were negligible because of small alongshore 234Th gradients. Our data indicated a poor correlation between seawater 238U activity and salinity. Assuming a linear relationship between the two would lead to significant underestimations of the total 234Th flux by up to 40 % in our study. Proper evaluation of both physical transport and variability in 238U activity is thus crucial in coastal 234Th flux studies. Finally, we showed large temporal variations on 234Th residence times across the Peruvian upwelling zone and cautioned future carbon export studies to take these temporal variabilities into consideration while evaluating carbon export efficiency.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: A strong warm event occurred in the southeastern tropical Atlantic Ocean off Angola and Namibia in January and February 2016 with sea surface temperature anomalies reaching 3 °C. In contrast to classical Benguela Niño events, the analysis of various direct observations indicates that the warming was not predominantly forced by an equatorial Kelvin wave exciting a coastally trapped wave but instead resulted from a combination of local processes that are related to (1) a weakening of the alongshore, i.e. mainly southerly, winds and (2) enhanced freshwater input through local precipitation and river discharge. Consistent with the weakened winds, we find a reduction in latent heat loss from the ocean and a poleward surface current anomaly. The surface freshening, which is detected in satellite observations of sea surface salinity, caused a very shallow mixed layer and enhanced upper ocean stratification. This is supported by the analysis of the velocity structure of the Angola Current at 11°S, which shows that at the time of the event subsurface velocities were directed northward while surface velocities were directed southward. The shallow layer of warm and fresh surface water was thus advected poleward by the surface current. In addition, a reduction of the local upwelling and the formation of a barrier layer that inhibits the entrainment of cool subsurface waters into the surface mixed layer might have contributed to the warm surface anomaly. The sudden termination of the warm event was accompanied by a re-intensification of southerly winds in March
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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