Characterizing Subsurface Oxygen Variability in the California Current System (CCS) and Its Links to Water Mass Distribution

Author:

Schultz Cristina12ORCID,Dunne John P.3ORCID,Liu Xiao4ORCID,Drenkard Elizabeth3ORCID,Carter Brendan56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Princeton University Atmospheric and Ocean Sciences Program Princeton NJ USA

2. Northeastern University Boston MA USA

3. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Princeton NJ USA

4. Science Applications International Corporation @ NOAA/NWS/NCEP/EMC College Park MD USA

5. Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, and Ecosystem Studies University of Washington Seattle WA USA

6. Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory Seattle WA USA

Abstract

AbstractThe california current system (CCS) supports a wide array of ecosystem services with hypoxia historically occurring in near‐bottom waters. Limited open ocean data coverage hinders the mechanistic understanding of CCS oxygen variability. By comparing three different models with varying horizontal resolutions, we found that dissolved oxygen (DO) anomalies in the CCS are propagated from shallower coastal areas to the deeper open ocean, where they are advected at a density and velocity consistent with basin‐scale circulation. Since DO decreases have been linked to water mass redistribution in the CCS, we conduct a water mass analysis on two of the models and on biogeochemical Argo floats that sampled multiple seasonal cycles. We found that high variability in biogeochemical variables (DO and nutrients) seen in regions of low variability of temperature and salinity could be linked to water mass mixing, as some of the water masses considered had higher gradients in biogeochemical variables compared to physical variables. Additional DO observations are needed, therefore, to further understand circulation changes in the CCS. We suggest that increased DO sampling north of 35˚N and near the shelf break would benefit model initialization and skill assessment, as well as allow for better assessment of the role of equatorial waters in driving DO in the northern CCS.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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