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The light blue shading indicates the high eddy kinetic energy regions in the Brazil/Malvinas Confluence and the Agulhas Retroflection. Light orange shading indicate the regions of convection and subduction. Light green shading areas of upwelling associated to the shallow tropical cells. Red lines depict areas of interest for monitoring the inter-ocean exchanges and the bifurcation of the South Equatorial Current. Purple line near 30°S Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate PIRATA backbone + extensions GOOD HOPE + BONUS AX18 AX98 ATLAS buoy GEF IfM – SIO (Russia) ifM - INPE

Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

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PIRATA backbone + extensions. ifM - INPE. AX98. ATLAS buoy. IfM – SIO (Russia). AX18. GEF. GOOD HOPE + BONUS. Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

The light blue shading indicates the high eddy kinetic energy regions in the Brazil/Malvinas Confluence and the Agulhas Retroflection. Light orange shading indicate the regions of convection and subduction. Light green shading areas of upwelling associated to the shallow tropical cells. Red lines depict areas of interest for monitoring the inter-ocean exchanges and the bifurcation of the South Equatorial Current. Purple line near 30°S region for monitoring the meridional mass and heat flux

Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

PIRATA backbone + extensions

GOOD HOPE + BONUS

AX18

AX98ATLAS buoy

GEF

IfM – SIO (Russia)

ifM - INPE

Page 2: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

•Recent changes in chl-a are among the largest observed (>50%, Gregg et al., 2005)

•Primary production shelf break front 1.9 to 7.8 gC m2 d-1 (Garcia et al., in preparation)

•F (CO2) = - 5.7 mmol CO2 m2 d-1 (Bianchi et al., 2005)

Primary production in the western South Atlantic

Page 3: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

7 0

6 5

6 0

5 5

5 0

4 5

4 0

3 5

8 0 7 5 7 0 6 5 6 0 5 5 5 0 4 5 4 0

ARGAU

Page 4: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

pCO2

-30 atm

70 65 60 55 5055

50

45

40

35

30

c d

>3>3 >1.5

<1

<1

>3

>1

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

5

Ocean productivity and CO2 fluxes

Chlorophyll-a FCO2

- 5.7 mmol m-2 d-1

Page 5: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

GEF PATAGONIA

Page 6: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Pre-deployment set-up

Page 7: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

TIM E

-200

-150

-100

-50

0

DE

PT

H (

m)

Feb. 4 - 00 hs. Feb. 5 - 00 hs. Feb. 6 - 00 hs.

High resolution sampling mode

Page 8: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Swimmers

Page 9: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Estimates of South Atlantic Meridional Heat Flux

Page 10: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Lat °S Heat Flux (PW) Method Source

32 0.16-0.68 Direct Bennett (1978)

30 0.39 Sea-air fluxes Bunker (1980)

32 0.66-0.88 Inverse Fu (1981)

30 0.69 Sea-air fluxes Hastenrath (1982)

32 0.4 Direct Bryan (1982)

30 0.38 Sea-air fluxes Hsiung (1985)

32 0.24 Inverse Rintoul (1991)

30 0.19 model Matano & Philander (1993)

30 0.56 FRAM Saunders &Thompson (1993)

37 0.45 to 0.94 Direct Saunders and King, 1995

37 0.67 FRAM Saunders and King, 1995

30 0.3 Inverse Macdonald & Wunsch (1996)

30 0.29 model Marchesiello et al. (1998)

30 -0.23 Inverse de las Heras & Schlitzer (1999)

30 0.22 Inverse McDonogh and King (2003)

32.5 0.23 Direct Talley (2003)

32.5 0.63 OCCAM Donners (2004)

37 0.28 POCM Matano & Schouten (2004)

30 0.39 ECCO Stammer, Kohl (2007)

30 0.17 ORCA25 Boening, Biastoch (2007)

30-35 0.54 XBT Garzoli and Barringer (2007)

Estimates of South Atlantic Meridional Heat Flux

Page 11: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Median pathways between successive oceanic sections crossed by water parcels. The colors indicate the mean depth of the transfer between two given sections. The North Atlantic overturning is defined here as the thermocline waters (in orange, red and pink) transformed into NADW (blue) in the North Atlantic sector. Numbers quantify the mass transfers between successive control sections (the Atlantic Equator, the Drake Passage, the SO section south of Australia and the Indonesian Throughflow).

Speich et al. 2007, submitted

Lagrangian reconstruction of the global Thermohaline Circulation

Page 12: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Lat °S Heat Flux (PW) Method Source

32 0.16-0.68 Direct Bennett (1978)

30 0.39 Sea-air fluxes Bunker (1980)

32 0.66-0.88 Inverse Fu (1981)

30 0.69 Sea-air fluxes Hastenrath (1982)

32 0.4 Direct Bryan (1982)

30 0.38 Sea-air fluxes Hsiung (1985)

32 0.24 Inverse Rintoul (1991)

30 0.19 model Matano & Philander (1993)

30 0.56 FRAM Saunders &Thompson (1993)

37 0.45 to 0.94 Direct Saunders and King, 1995

37 0.67 FRAM Saunders and King, 1995

30 0.3 Inverse Macdonald & Wunsch (1996)

30 0.29 model Marchesiello et al. (1998)

30 -0.23 Inverse de las Heras & Schlitzer (1999)

30 0.22 Inverse McDonogh and King (2003)

32.5 0.23 Direct Talley (2003)

32.5 0.63 OCCAM Donners (2004)

37 0.28 POCM Matano & Schouten (2004)

30 0.39 ECCO Stammer, Kohl (2007)

30 0.17 ORCA25 Boening, Biastoch (2007)

30-35 0.54 XBT Garzoli and Barringer (2007)

Estimates of South Atlantic Meridional Heat Flux

Page 13: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

High-resolution XBT line AX18 (14 sections)

Garzoli & Baringer 2007, submitted

Page 14: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Meridional heat flux – meridional structure

Integrated from 80ºN

Garzoli & Baringer 2007, submitted

Page 15: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

1990 1995 2000 2005

-0.4

0

0.4

0.8

1.23

5ºS

Me

rid

ion

al H

ea

t Flu

x (P

W)

ORCA 30ºS

1990 1995 2000 2005

-0.4

0

0.4

0.8

1.23

5ºS

Me

rid

ion

al H

ea

t Flu

x (P

W)

ECCO 35ºS

ORCA 30ºS

1990 1995 2000 2005

-0.4

0

0.4

0.8

1.23

5ºS

Me

rid

ion

al H

ea

t Flu

x (P

W)

ECCO 35ºS

ORCA 30ºS

AX18 35ºS

Meridional heat flux – model comparisons

Integrated from 80ºN

Page 16: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

Structure of meridional flow –

(some) error sources

Courtesy from Baher & Marotzke, in prep.

“observed” thermal wind

Page 17: Regions identified as important for implementing a South Atlantic observing system for climate

UPCOMING WORKSHOP

A monitoring system for heat and mass transports in the South Atlantic as a component of the Meridional Overturning Circulation

Estancia San Ceferino, Buenos Aires Argentina, May 8 - 10, 2007

To establish the feasibility of and to foster collaborations for a monitoring system for meridional heat and mass transports in the South Atlantic and inter-ocean exchanges as a component of the Meridional Overturning Circulation.

25 participants from:

ArgentinaBrazilFrance GermanyRussia

South AfricaUKUruguayUSA