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CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region Implementation Panel
Kevin Speer; Matthew England, co-Chairs–CLIVAR IPO Officer Catherine Beswick–SCAR liaison Mike Sparrow
Panel Members:•Rintoul Stephen
•Fukamachi Yasushi
•Goosse Hugues
•Lovenduski Nicole
•Marshall Gareth
•Martinson Douglas
•Naveira Garabato Alberto
•Speich Sabrina
•Thompson David
•Orsi Alex, Fahrbach Eberhard ex-officio
Southern Ocean region serves as a link between ozone depletion (WMO) and carbon cycle (IPCC)
Role of the Southern Oceanin the Earth system
The Southern Ocean:• Acts as a valve controlling exchange between the
surface and the deep ocean;• Stores more heat and anthropogenic carbon than any
other latitude band and is the primary return path for nutrients;
• Influences rate of mass loss by the Antarctic ice sheet and therefore the rate of sea-level rise;
• Is home to unique ecosystems + biodiversity, potentially vulnerable to environmental change.
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
ARGO:A revolution for the SO starting in 2004
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
The Southern Ocean: a particularly dynamical active ocean that continuosly
interact with the atmosphere
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
Science Highlight:Eddy saturation in a QG eddy-resolving model
wind
ACC transport~ constantEKE increases
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
Science Highlight:SO versus the Tropical and NH oceans
HEAT CONTENT ANOMALY2004-2008
FRESH WATER VOLUME ANOMALY
2004-2008
von Schukman et al. in prep.
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
Purkey and Johnson, 2011
Science Highlight:Bottom waters changes
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
undersaturation (blue) by 2030?
Aragonite Pteropod:a major food source may start to dissolve
Orr et al. (2005)
2030
450 ppm
Aragonite
CO2
OCMIP-2 modelingAragonite % saturation
21002000
Acidification near tipping point?
Science Highlight: Southern Ocean still a sinkCO2 fluxes weakening as SAM changes?
Imperatives
• ABSOLUTE need to maintain ARGO (full water column depth hydrographic, and extend sampling or observational techniques to the under-ice-covered ocean, up to the ice shelf grounding line)
• The Southern Ocean appears to be eddy saturated but we don’t understand the role of eddies with respect to transport and mixing (the IPCC models are not eddy resolving so crucial to address this effect)
• VITAL to address the gap in estimates of air-sea fluxes of heat and moisture, CO2, wind stress, and boundary layer parameterization near continent
• Broader evaluation of the impact of acidification and the ecosystem response
• More accurate diagnoses of the freshwater and moisture transfers among the coupled ocean-ice-atmosphere system, and associated feedbacks
• Need of sub-ice observations
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
Frontiers
• Role of the Southern Ocean in the carbon cycle
• What does ozone recovery portend for Southern Hemisphere climate and the carbon cycle?
• What is the future of Antarctic ice? Key for albedo, surface heat flux feedbacks and ice shelves (sea-level). Improve models of ocean upwelling, overturning, and interaction with the shelf
• What is the impact of acidification? Carry out reanalyses using coupled models with biochemical representations of the carbon cycle: syntheses of ocean/ice/atmosphere data and models
• What is the future of the Antarctic continental margin? Evaluation and improvement of Earth system models in the high latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere, including runoff from ice shelf lakes
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
Recent panel activities
• Panel meeting in Southampton Jun 2010 hosted by the National Oceanography Centre
• Participation in IPY (CASO, SASSI)• New membership (N. Lovenduski for the carbon community)• Southern Ocean Vision Document finalized• SOOS Design Plan• Initiation of a common process study plan with the carbon
community
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
Observing System Issues and Challenges and the development of the SOOS
The Southern Ocean Observing System• Design and implementation of an observing system that encompasses physical,
biogeochemical and ecological processes is therefore a formidable challenge• Requires multiple nation and agency involvement since the region is vast,
remote and logistically difficult to access and thus is one of the least sampled regions on Earth
Observing gaps?• Ecosystem monitoring on Argo profiling• CO2 gas fluxes• Must expand ocean coverage within sea-ice zone• Must include atmospheric boundary layer• Must include ice interaction regions
International SOOS office to carry forward this work
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
A Southern Ocean Observing System – SOOS
SAMOC – South Atlantic MOC
Pilot Array(2008-2010)
SAMBA
SAMOC Array(2012-2015)
Argentina Brazil France
Germany NSF, NOAA Russia South
Africa
Major plans and activities
• Review membership and set direction: emphasize modeling the ocean/atmosphere/ice system and process studies
• Publication of the final SOOS design plan 2011
• Develop a review paper on the state of southern climate system (underway with panel co-authors)
• Work with CliC (co-chair Tony Worby) to develop a freshwater flux estimate and evaluation for the Southern Ocean
• WRCP Open Science Conference : poster session
• Panel meeting Boulder CO October 2011
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region
Activities relating to Southern Ocean modeling issues
• Development of Southern Ocean metrics to test model skill
• Provision of latest information on poorly constrained model parameters (Kv, Kappa, etc.)
• Process studies – to inform on missing physics
• Observation programmes to bridge data-model gaps
CLIVAR/CliC/SCAR Southern Ocean Region