Winter Arctic Outflow Winds Cause Upper Ocean Cooling and Reoxygenation in a Temperate Canadian Fjord

Author:

Jackson J. M.12ORCID,Holmes K.1ORCID,Klymak J. M.3ORCID,Bianucci L.4ORCID,Evans W.1ORCID,Floyd W. C.56,Hannah C. G.4ORCID,Hare A.1ORCID,Wan D.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Hakai Institute Victoria BC Canada

2. Now at Institute of Ocean Sciences Fisheries and Oceans Canada Sidney BC Canada

3. School of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of Victoria Victoria BC Canada

4. Institute of Ocean Sciences Fisheries and Oceans Canada Sidney BC Canada

5. Coastal Hydrology Research Lab Vancouver Island University Nanaimo BC Canada

6. British Columbia Ministry of Forests Nanaimo BC Canada

Abstract

AbstractArctic outflow winds bring cold air from the continent to the coastline through mountain passes. Using observational data and a 2‐D model, we show that a February 2019 outflow event caused the upper 100 m in Bute Inlet, British Columbia (within the traditional territory of the Homalco Nation) to cool up to 1.9°C and gain up to 4.1 mLL−1 of oxygen. The cold, oxygenated water persisted for almost 1 year within the 1,023–1,023.5 kgm−3 isopycnal range (∼50–150 m). Atmospheric (from 1929 to 2022) and oceanographic (from 1951 to 2022) data showed a statistically significant relationship between continental air temperature at Tatlayoko Lake and temperature and oxygen in Bute Inlet. This local mechanism that counters some effects of climate change could create a biological refugium as surrounding waters warm and lose oxygen at a faster rate. The number of outflow events decreased from 1951 to 2018, and increased since.

Funder

Hakai Institute

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

Reference32 articles.

1. A synoptic climatology of strong along-channel winds on the Coast of British Columbia, Canada

2. Twenty-Seven Years of Manual Fresh Snowfall Density Measurements on Whistler Mountain, British Columbia

3. British Columbia Ministry of Environment. (2016).Indicators of climate change for British Columbia 2016 update. Retrieved fromhttps://www2.gov.bc.ca

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