Abstract Standing meanders are a key component of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) circulation system, and numerical studies have shown that these features may locally enhance subduction, upwelling, as well as lateral and vertical tracer transport. Yet, observational data from these regions remain sparse. Here, we present results based on measurements made by a group of autonomous platforms sampling an ACC standing meander formed due to the interaction of the Polar Front with the Southwest Indian Ridge. Two Seagliders were deployed alongside a Biogeochemical‐Argo float that was advected through the standing meander. In the high eddy kinetic energy region of the standing meander, the glider observations reveal enhanced submesoscale frontal gradients as well as heightened tracer variability at depth, as compared to the more quiescent region further downstream. Vertical gradients in spice and apparent oxygen utilization are reduced in the standing meander despite similarities in the large‐scale vertical stratification, suggesting greater ventilation of the surface ocean. These observations are consistent with numerical studies that highlight standing meanders as hotspots for ventilation and subduction due to enhanced mesoscale stirring and submesoscale vertical velocities. Our results emphasize the need to account for spatial heterogeneity in processes influencing air‐sea exchange, carbon export, and biogeochemical cycling in the Southern Ocean.
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Tracer Stirring and Variability in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current Near the Southwest Indian Ridge
Abstract Oceanic macroturbulence is efficient at stirring and transporting tracers. The dynamical properties of this stirring can be characterized by statistically quantifying tracer structures. Here, we characterize the macroscale (1–100 km) tracer structures observed by two Seagliders downstream of the Southwest Indian Ridge in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC). These are some of the first glider observations in an energetic standing meander of the ACC, a region associated with enhanced ventilation. The small‐scale density variance in the mixed layer (ML) was relatively enhanced near the surface and base of the ML, while being muted at mid‐depth in the ML, suggesting the formation mechanism to be associated with ML instabilities and eddies. In addition, ML density fronts were formed by comparable contributions from temperature and salinity gradients. In the interior, along‐isopycnal spectra and structure functions of spice indicated that there is relatively lower variance at smaller scales than would be expected based on non‐local stirring, suggesting that flows smaller than the deformation radius play a role in the cascade of tracers to small scales. These interior spice anomalies spanned across isopycnals, and were found to be about 3–5 times flatter than the aspect ratio that would be expected for O(1) Burger number flows like interior QG dynamics, suggesting the ratio of vertical shear to horizontal strain is greater thanN/f. This further supports that small‐scale flows, with high‐mode vertical structures, impact tracer distributions.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1756882
- PAR ID:
- 10522833
- Publisher / Repository:
- JGR-Oceans
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
- Volume:
- 129
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2169-9275
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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