Turbulence in the sea ice impacted Southern Ocean and its implications for primary production and carbon export
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2022-05-12
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The sea ice impacted Southern Ocean, south of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current,
is one of the most important regions on earth for the cycling of carbon and distribution
of heat and freshwater around the globe. Here, along-isopycnal upwelling of
warm, carbon-rich circumpolar deep water coincides with the annual growth and melt
of Antarctic sea ice that represents one of the worlds largest surface water transformations.
The air-sea-ice buoyancy exchanges and biological processes that change the
surface water properties therefore have global consequences, as they set the properties
of downwelling intermediate waters that enter the upper branch of the global thermohaline
circulation. The region hosts some of the largest uncertainties in global climate
models. The reason for this stems from two sources. Firstly, the spatio-temporal resolution
of global climate models is limited by computational constraints such that smaller
scale processes need to be parameterized. Secondly, the challenges associated with
making observations in or near sea ice and in the harsh and remote conditions of the
Southern Ocean means that the region is sparsely sampled, and as such, the parameterizations
of the small scale and turbulent terms in global climate models are validated
based only on a few in situ samples. This thesis concerns the observation and interpretation
of (sub)meso- to micro scale turbulence and its implications in the sea ice impacted
Southern Ocean. I aimed to understand the 0.01-1 km scale physical and biological processes
that drive changes in the properties of the upper ocean following sea ice melt,
using groundbreaking sustained high temporal and spatial resolution observations made
by gliders. There are three main findings. Firstly, we find that sea ice melt enhances
stirring of submesoscale flows (0.1-10 km) and therefore lateral variability in the upper
ocean, but simultaneously constrains vertical fluxes between the ocean interior and
surface. Secondly, turbulent diapycnal mixing and double diffusive convection (0.1-1
m scales) drive the warming of the subsurface winter water, therefore mediating fluxes
between the ocean interior and surface. Finally, phytoplankton respond favourably to
larger volume sea ice that enhances winter mixing of nutrients from the deep reservoir
and upper ocean stratification in the summer. The preliminary evidence from this study
suggests that the resultant higher intensity phytoplankton bloom translates to enhanced
short term carbon export but not necessarily long term export. Overall, we show, using
observations, that the variability and transport of heat and freshwater flux in the sea
ice impacted Southern Ocean is sensitive to sea ice, with downstream impacts on phytoplankton,
the biological carbon pump and ultimately the upper cell of the meridional
overturning circulation.
Description
Keywords
Southern Ocean, sea ice, submesoscale, diapycnal mixing, heat fluxes, primary production, carbon export, gliders.