Hydrographic variability along the inner and mid-shelf region of the western Ross Sea obtained using instrumented seals

Piñones A.; Hofmann E.E.; Costa D.P.; Goetz K.; Burns J.M.; Roquet F.; Dinniman M.S.; Klinck J.M.

Abstract

Temperature and salinity measurements obtained from sensors deployed on Weddell seals (Leptonychotes weddellii) between late austral summer and the following spring for 2010-2012 were used to describe the temporal and spatial variability of hydrographic conditions in the western Ross Sea, with particular emphasis on the inner-shelf region off Victoria Land and McMurdo Sound. Potential temperature-salinity diagrams constructed for regions where the seals remained for extended periods showed four water masses on the continental shelf: Modified Circumpolar Deep Water, Antarctic Surface Water, Shelf Water and Modified Shelf Water. Depth-time distributions of potential density and buoyancy frequency showed the erosion of the upper water column stratification associated with the transition from summer to fall/winter conditions. The within-year and interannual variability associated with this transition was related to wind speed. Changes in upper water column density were positively correlated with cross-shelf wind speeds > 5.5 m s(-1) with a 3-4 day lag. A range of wind speeds was required to erode the density structure because of different levels of stratification in each year. A comparison of wind mixing potential versus stratification (Wedderburn number) showed that synoptic scale wind events during 2012 with speeds of 5.5 and 6.5 m s(-1) were needed to erode the summer stratification for Ross Island and Victoria Land regions, respectively. Stronger winds ( > 8.5 m s(-1) ) were required during 2010 and 2011. The interannual variability in total heat content accumulated during summer (about 20%) was related to the duration of open water, with the largest heat content occurring in 2012, which was characterized by a summer sea ice minimum stronger than other years and relatively higher mCDW influence over the mid and outer-shelf regions. The heat content was lost after mid-April and reached a minimum in winter as a result of deep winter convection. The quantitative analysis of hydrographic variability of the inner-shelf region of the western Ross Sea obtained from the seal-derived measurements provides a baseline for assessing future changes.

Más información

Título según WOS: Hydrographic variability along the inner and mid-shelf region of the western Ross Sea obtained using instrumented seals
Título según SCOPUS: Hydrographic variability along the inner and mid-shelf region of the western Ross Sea obtained using instrumented seals
Título de la Revista: PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY
Volumen: 174
Editorial: PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 131
Página final: 142
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.pocean.2019.01.003

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS