Oceanic fronts associated with strong western boundary current extensions vent a vast amount of heat into the atmosphere, anchoring mid-latitude storm tracks and facilitating ocean carbon sequestration. However, it remains unclear how the surface heat reservoir is replenished by ocean processes to sustain the atmospheric heat uptake. Using high-resolution climate simulations, we find that the vertical heat transport by ocean mesoscale eddies acts as an important heat supplier to the surface ocean in frontal regions. This vertical eddy heat transport is not accounted for by the prevailing inviscid and adiabatic ocean dynamical theories such as baroclinic instability and frontogenesis but is tightly related to the atmospheric forcing. Strong surface cooling associated with intense winds in winter promotes turbulent mixing in the mixed layer, destructing the vertical shear of mesoscale eddies. The restoring of vertical shear induces an ageostrophic secondary circulation transporting heat from the subsurface to surface ocean.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aba7880 | DOI Listing |
Luminescence
January 2025
A.O. Kovalevsky Institute of Biology of the Southern Seas, Sevastopol, Russian Federation.
Bioluminescence is a functional property used by many marine organisms for multilateral communications. In the Arabian Sea, the dinoflagellate Noctiluca scintillans (Macartney) Kofoid and Swezy, 1921, contributes gradually to the bioluminescent potential (BP) of the phytoplankton community. Experiments, field sampling, and remote sensing were employed, to estimate the seasonal variation of the BP and the abundance of cells in the northwestern Arabian Sea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Bull (Beijing)
December 2024
Frontiers Science Center for Deep Ocean Multispheres and Earth System (FDOMES) and Physical Oceanography Laboratory/Key Laboratory of Ocean Observation and Information of Hainan Province, Sanya Oceanographic Institution, Ocean University of China, Qingdao/Sanya 266000/572000, China; Sanya Oceanographic Laboratory, Sanya 572000, China; Laboratory for Ocean Dynamics and Climate, Qingdao Marine Science and Technology Center, Qingdao 266000, China. Electronic address:
The South China Sea (SCS) is abundant with complex multiscale dynamic processes but their spatiotemporal variations, generation and evolution mechanisms, and mutual interactions remain inadequately understood due to the lack of long-term in situ observations. To explore oceanic multiscale dynamics in the SCS, the SCS Mooring Array (SCSMA) was began to be constructed since 2009. The SCSMA consists of ∼40 moorings and is the largest in situ ocean observing system in marginal seas worldwide.
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November 2024
Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, LEGI, 38000, Grenoble, France.
The most prominent and persistent feature of the eastern Mediterranean Levantine Basin (LB) is the warm anticyclonic Cyprus Eddy (CE) located above the Eratosthenes Seamount (ESM). This eddy periodically couples with two smaller cyclonic and anticyclonic eddies, the South Shikmona Eddy (SSE) and North Shikmona Eddy (NSE), which form downstream. The reason for the zonal drift of the CE center and the formation mechanism of the CE, SSE and NSE is largely debated today, yet the upwelling and biological productivity of the LB can be strongly impacted by the local dynamics.
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November 2024
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, 91109, USA.
Ocean mesoscale eddies, with km size, present in energetic regions of the global ocean, are known to impact local and remote atmospheric weather. The impact of eddies in the Mediterranean Sea on the local weather, however, remains largely unknown. Here, we study this impact during an extreme weather event observed over Israel on January , 2020, resulting in heavy rains and floods.
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