Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine Heatwaves

Marine heatwaves (MHWs) are extreme ocean warming events that can have devastating impacts, from biological mortalities to irreversible redistributions within the ocean ecosystem. MHWs are an added concern because they are expected to increase in frequency and duration. To date, our understanding of...

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Main Authors: Youstina Elzahaby, Amandine Schaeffer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2019.00745/full
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spelling doaj-8359cfb23c0e4f2dab1c1a627080c0142020-11-25T01:51:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452019-12-01610.3389/fmars.2019.00745462802Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine HeatwavesYoustina Elzahaby0Amandine Schaeffer1Amandine Schaeffer2Coastal and Regional Oceanography Lab, School of Mathematics and Statistics, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaCoastal and Regional Oceanography Lab, School of Mathematics and Statistics, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaCentre for Marine Science and Innovation, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, AustraliaMarine heatwaves (MHWs) are extreme ocean warming events that can have devastating impacts, from biological mortalities to irreversible redistributions within the ocean ecosystem. MHWs are an added concern because they are expected to increase in frequency and duration. To date, our understanding of these extreme ocean temperature events is mainly limited to the surface layers, despite some of the consequences they are known to have on the deep marine environment. In this paper, using data from sea surface temperature (SST) and in situ observations from Argo floats, we investigate the anomalous water characteristics during MHWs down to 2000 m in the western Tasman Sea which is located off the east coast of Australia. Focusing on their vertical extensions, characteristics and potential drivers, we break MHWs down into three categories (1) shallow [0–150 m], (2) intermediate [150–800 m], and (3) deep events [>800 m]. Only shallow events show a relationship between surface temperature anomalies and depth extent, in agreement with a likely surface origin in response to anomalous air-sea fluxes. By contrast, deep events have greater and deeper maximum temperature anomalies than their surface signal (mean of almost 3.4°C at 165 m depth) and are more frequent than expected (>45%), dominating MHWs in winter. They predominantly occur within warm core eddies, which are deep mesoscale anticyclonic structures carrying warm water-mass from the East Australian Current (EAC). This study highlights the importance of MHWs down to 2000 m and the influence of oceanographic circulation on their characteristics. Consequently, we recommend a complementary analysis of sea level anomalies and SST be conducted to improve the prediction of MHW characteristics and impacts, both physical and biological.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2019.00745/fullMHW depthextreme temperature anomalywarm-core eddywestern boundary currentocean heat contentEast Australian current
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Youstina Elzahaby
Amandine Schaeffer
Amandine Schaeffer
spellingShingle Youstina Elzahaby
Amandine Schaeffer
Amandine Schaeffer
Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine Heatwaves
Frontiers in Marine Science
MHW depth
extreme temperature anomaly
warm-core eddy
western boundary current
ocean heat content
East Australian current
author_facet Youstina Elzahaby
Amandine Schaeffer
Amandine Schaeffer
author_sort Youstina Elzahaby
title Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine Heatwaves
title_short Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine Heatwaves
title_full Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine Heatwaves
title_fullStr Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine Heatwaves
title_full_unstemmed Observational Insight Into the Subsurface Anomalies of Marine Heatwaves
title_sort observational insight into the subsurface anomalies of marine heatwaves
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Marine heatwaves (MHWs) are extreme ocean warming events that can have devastating impacts, from biological mortalities to irreversible redistributions within the ocean ecosystem. MHWs are an added concern because they are expected to increase in frequency and duration. To date, our understanding of these extreme ocean temperature events is mainly limited to the surface layers, despite some of the consequences they are known to have on the deep marine environment. In this paper, using data from sea surface temperature (SST) and in situ observations from Argo floats, we investigate the anomalous water characteristics during MHWs down to 2000 m in the western Tasman Sea which is located off the east coast of Australia. Focusing on their vertical extensions, characteristics and potential drivers, we break MHWs down into three categories (1) shallow [0–150 m], (2) intermediate [150–800 m], and (3) deep events [>800 m]. Only shallow events show a relationship between surface temperature anomalies and depth extent, in agreement with a likely surface origin in response to anomalous air-sea fluxes. By contrast, deep events have greater and deeper maximum temperature anomalies than their surface signal (mean of almost 3.4°C at 165 m depth) and are more frequent than expected (>45%), dominating MHWs in winter. They predominantly occur within warm core eddies, which are deep mesoscale anticyclonic structures carrying warm water-mass from the East Australian Current (EAC). This study highlights the importance of MHWs down to 2000 m and the influence of oceanographic circulation on their characteristics. Consequently, we recommend a complementary analysis of sea level anomalies and SST be conducted to improve the prediction of MHW characteristics and impacts, both physical and biological.
topic MHW depth
extreme temperature anomaly
warm-core eddy
western boundary current
ocean heat content
East Australian current
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2019.00745/full
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