Evidence for Kilometer‐Scale Biophysical Features at the Gulf Stream Front

Author:

Gray Patrick Clifton12ORCID,Savelyev Ivan3ORCID,Cassar Nicolas4ORCID,Lévy Marina5ORCID,Boss Emmanuel1ORCID,Lehahn Yoav2,Bourdin Guillaume1,Thompson Kate A.6ORCID,Windle Anna7,Gronniger Jessica8,Floge Sheri6,Hunt Dana E.8ORCID,Silsbe Greg9ORCID,Johnson Zackary I.8ORCID,Johnston David W.8

Affiliation:

1. School of Marine Sciences University of Maine Orono ME USA

2. Department of Marine Geosciences Charney School of Marine Sciences University of Haifa Haifa Israel

3. U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Washington DC USA

4. Nicholas School of the Environment Duke University Durham NC USA

5. Laboratoire d'Océanographie et du Climat (LOCEAN) Institut Pierre Simon Laplace (IPSL) Sorbonne Université (CNRS/IRD/MNHN) Paris France

6. Department of Biology Wake Forest University Winston‐Salem NC USA

7. Ocean Ecology Laboratory NASA Goddard Space Flight Center/Science Systems and Applications, Inc Greenbelt MD USA

8. Duke University Marine Laboratory Nicholas School of the Environment Duke University Beaufort NC USA

9. Horn Point Laboratory University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Cambridge MD USA

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the interplay of ocean physics and biology at the submesoscale and below (<30 km) is an ongoing challenge in oceanography. While poorly constrained, these scales may be of critical importance for understanding how changing ocean dynamics will impact marine ecosystems. Fronts in the ocean, regions where two disparate water masses meet and isopycnals become tilted toward vertical, are considered hotspots for biophysical interaction, but there is limited observational evidence at the appropriate scales to assess their importance. Fronts around western boundary currents like the Gulf Stream are of particular interest as these dynamic physical regions are thought to influence both productivity and composition of primary producers; however, how exactly this plays out is not well known. Using satellite data and 2 years of in situ observations across the Gulf Stream front near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, we investigate how submesoscale frontal dynamics could affect biological communities and generate hotspots of productivity and export. We assess the seasonality and phenology of the region, generalize the kilometer‐scale structure of the front, and analyze 69 transects to assess two physical processes of potential biogeochemical importance: cold shelf filament subduction and high salinity Sargasso Sea obduction. We link these processes observationally to meanders in the Gulf Stream and discuss how cold filament subduction could be exporting carbon and how obduction of high salinity water from depth is connected with high chlorophyll‐a. Finally, we report on phytoplankton community composition in each of these features and integrate these observations into our understanding of frontal submesoscale dynamics.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

U.S. Naval Research Laboratory

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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