Offshore Plankton Blooms via Mesoscale and Sub‐Mesoscale Interactions With a Western Boundary Current

Author:

Chapman Christopher C.1ORCID,Sloyan Bernadette M.1ORCID,Schaeffer Amandine23ORCID,Suthers Iain M.24ORCID,Pitt Kylie A.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Hobart Marine Laboratories CSIRO Environment Climate Ocean Atmosphere Interactions Program Battery Point TAS Australia

2. Centre for Marine Science and Innovation School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia

3. School of Mathematics and Statistics University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia

4. Sydney Institute of Marine Science Mosman NSW Australia

5. School of Environment and Science Coastal and Marine Research Centre Australian Rivers Institute Griffith University Southport QLD Australia

Abstract

AbstractWe investigate mesoscale circulations in an oligotrophic western boundary current, the East Australian Current, during a sustained offshore plankton bloom. Using a series of high resolution hydrographic sections taken a few days apart, supplemented with in situ samples of nutrients, satellite and long‐term mooring measurements, we describe a dynamic situation by which the East Australian Current's velocity core and associated front, interacts with a mesoscale eddy, migrating zonally by approximately 100 km over the course of 10 days. This interaction between the boundary current and mesoscale eddy field occurred concurrently with a sustained offshore plankton bloom. Sub‐mesoscale upwelling motions on the inshore flank of the boundary current core coincides with increased nutrient and plankton concentrations in the near surface. Calculations based on the quasi‐geostrophic omega equation and finite size lyapunov exponents suggest that these vertical motion arise from the interaction of the mesoscale with the East Australian Current. Frontolysis (the destruction of horizontal buoyancy gradients) leads to a thermally indirect ageostrophic secondary circulation that has the potential to supply nutrients to the near surface ocean. Using satellite data, we investigate the mesoscale conditions associated with all offshore phytoplankton blooms identified by an automated method, finding similar mesoscale patterns to those observed during the field campaign. We conclude that the interaction between the East Australian Current and mesoscale eddies is a recurrent catalyst for the complex sub‐mesoscale dynamics we observed, and is likely a fundamental processes in driving offshore biological productivity in the region.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Reference86 articles.

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