Abstract Shelfbreak exchange processes have been studied extensively in the Middle Atlantic Bight. An important process occurring during stratified conditions is the Salinity Maximum Intrusion. These features are commonly observed at the depth of the seasonal pycnocline, and less frequently at the surface and bottom. Data collected from NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service Ecosystem Monitoring program as well as data collected from the fishing industry in Rhode Island show that the middepth intrusions are now occurring much more frequently than was reported in a previous climatology of the intrusions (Lentz, 2003,https://doi.org/10.1029/2003JC001859). The intrusions have a greater salinity difference from ambient water and penetrate large distances shoreward of the shelf break relative to the earlier climatology. The longer term data from the Ecosystem Monitoring program indicates that the increase in frequency occurred in 2000, and thus may be linked to a recent regime shift in the annual formation rate of Warm Core Rings by the Gulf Stream. Given the increased frequency of these salty intrusions, it will be necessary to properly resolve this process in numerical simulations in order to account for salt budgets for the continental shelf and slope. 
                        more » 
                        « less   
                    
                            
                            A hotspot and mechanism of enhanced bottom intrusion on the southern New England shelf
                        
                    
    
            Abstract Understanding the occurrence of the intrusion of open ocean water onto continental shelves has scientific significance and societal relevance as the intrusion can significantly disrupt the marine ecosystem and fisheries. High-resolution numerical modeling is used to investigate the spatiotemporal occurrence and mechanisms of highly anomalous bottom intrusions on the southern New England shelf. Based on multi-year numerical simulations, this study reveals a hotspot of cross-isobath bottom-intensified intrusions at a topographic trough. Examination of multiple events portrays a robust mechanism of locally enhanced bottom intrusions. Persistent upwelling-favorable winds set up an enhanced pressure gradient field at the topographic trough and drive the intrusion a large-distance onshore. Numerical experiments with and without the topographic trough show that the localized pressure gradient results from a combination of the shelf orientation and local bathymetry. Although highly anomalous waters on the shelf relate to wind forcing, correlations between the wind stress anomaly and bottom salinity anomaly at the location of the enhanced intrusion is modest, implying the need to incorporate other environmental factors to develop more deterministic prediction models for subsurface conditions on the shelf. The results have important implications for marine environment and fisheries management. 
        more » 
        « less   
        
    
                            - Award ID(s):
- 2241407
- PAR ID:
- 10572905
- Publisher / Repository:
- IOP Science
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Environmental Research Communications
- Volume:
- 6
- Issue:
- 7
- ISSN:
- 2515-7620
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 071008
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
- 
            
- 
            Cross-Shelf Exchange in Prograde Antarctic Troughs Driven by Offshore-Propagating Dense Water EddiesAbstract This study examines the link between near-bottom outflows of dense water formed in Antarctic coastal polynyas and onshore intrusions of Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) through prograde troughs cutting across the continental shelf. Numerical simulations show that the dense water outflow is primarily in the form of cyclonic eddies. The trough serves as a topographic guide that organizes the offshore-moving dense water eddies into a chain pattern. The offshore migration speed of the dense water eddies is similar to the velocity of the dense water offshore flow in the trough, which scaling analysis finds to be proportional to the reduced gravity of the dense water and the slope of the trough sidewalls and to be inversely proportional to the Coriolis parameter. Our model simulations indicate that, as these cyclonic dense water eddies move across the trough mouth into the deep ocean, they entrain CDW from offshore and carry CDW clockwise along their periphery into the trough. Subsequent cyclonic dense water eddies then entrain the intruding CDW further toward the coast along the trough. This process of recurring onshore entrainment of CDW by a topographically constrained chain of offshore-flowing dense water eddies is consistent with topographic hotspots of onshore intrusion of CDW around Antarctica identified by other studies. It can bring CDW from offshore to close to the coast and thus impact the heat flux into Antarctic coastal regions, affecting interactions among ocean, sea ice, and ice shelves. Significance StatementTroughs cutting across the Antarctic continental shelf are a major conduit for the transport of dense shelf water from coastal formation regions to the shelf break. This study describes a process in which clockwise-spinning eddies moving offshore in prograde troughs successively entrain filaments of relatively warm Circumpolar Deep Water from offshore across the entire shelf and into the coastal region. This eddy-induced transport provides a new understanding of the shelf edge exchange process identified in previous studies and a mechanism for further onshore intrusion of the warm Circumpolar Deep Water over parts of the Antarctic shelf. The resultant onshore heat flux could potentially bring a substantial amount of heat from offshore into the coastal region and thus affect ice–ocean interactions through melting sea ice and ice shelves.more » « less
- 
            Shoreward intrusions of anomalously salty water along the continental shelf of the Middle Atlantic Bight are often observed in spring and summer. Exchange of heat, nutrients, and carbon across the salinity-intrusion front has a significant impact on the marine ecosystem and fisheries. In this article, we developed a method of using an autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) to detect a salinity-intrusion front and track the front’s movement. Autonomous front detection is based on the different vertical structures of salinity in the two distinct water types: the vertical difference of salinity is large in the intruding saltier water because of the salinity “tongue” at mid-depth, but is small in the nearshore fresher water due to absence of the salinity anomaly. Every time the AUV crosses and detects the front, the vehicle makes a turn at an oblique angle to cross the front, thus zigzagging through the front to map the frontal zone. The AUV’s zigzags sweep back and forth to track the front as it moves over time. From June 25 to 30, 2021, a Tethys-class long-range AUV mapped and tracked a salinity-intrusion front on the southern New England shelf. The frontal tracking revealed the salinity intrusion’s 3-D structure and temporal evolution with unprecedented detail.more » « less
- 
            Abstract The characteristics and dynamics of depth-average along-shelf currents at monthly and longer time scales are examined using 17 years of observations from the Martha’s Vineyard Coastal Observatory on the southern New England inner shelf. Monthly averages of the depth-averaged along-shelf current are almost always westward, with the largest interannual variability in winter. There is a consistent annual cycle with westward currents of 5 cm s −1 in summer decreasing to 1–2 cm s −1 in winter. Both the annual cycle and interannual variability in the depth-average along-shelf current are predominantly driven by the along-shelf wind stress. In the absence of wind forcing, there is a westward flow of ∼5 cm s −1 throughout the year. At monthly time scales, the depth-average along-shelf momentum balance is primarily between the wind stress, surface gravity wave–enhanced bottom stress, and an opposing pressure gradient that sets up along the southern New England shelf in response to the wind. Surface gravity wave enhancement of bottom stress is substantial over the inner shelf and is essential to accurately estimating the bottom stress variation across the inner shelf. Significance Statement Seventeen years of observations from the Martha’s Vineyard Coastal Observatory on the inner continental shelf of southern New England reveal that the depth-average along-shelf current is almost always westward and stronger in summer than in winter. Both the annual cycle and variations around the annual cycle are primarily driven by the along-shelf wind stress. The wind stress is opposed by a pressure gradient that sets up along the southern New England shelf and a surface gravity wave–enhanced bottom stress. The surface gravity wave enhancement of bottom stress is substantial in less than 30 m of water and is essential in determining the variation of the along-shelf current across the inner shelf.more » « less
- 
            Abstract Theoretical understanding of the upward vertical motion into the surface layer during coastal upwelling is often based on steady linear Ekman dynamics. In steady linear theory, the divergence of surface transport that leads to upwelling is associated with either overlap of the frictional boundary layers over the inner shelf or wind stress curl farther offshore. However, the alongshore current associated with a coastal upwelling front is associated with relative vorticity which modifies surface transport. A new nonlinear theory shows that, under spatially uniform wind forcing, the fraction of Ekman transport upwelled over the inner shelf tends to decrease with increasing slope Burger numberSas the baroclinic alongshore jet strengthens and cyclonic vorticity increases. Similar patterns are shown in a set of idealized numerical experiments. Unsteadiness in the alongshore flow, neglected in the theory, strongly influences the cross-shelf distribution of upwelling in the numerical model at locations offshore of the inner shelf and near the core of the upwelling jet. The theory and numerical modeling are extended to explore the effect of a large-scale alongshore pressure gradient force (PGF) that forms in response to alongshore variations in wind stress. At highS, a baroclinic PGF is associated with a shallow onshore return flow, but the fraction of modeled upwelling that occurs over the inner shelf is not strongly affected. The results emphasize that the strength and location of the alongshore jet strongly influence the cross-shelf distribution of coastal upwelling in the presence of stratification and a sloping bottom. Significance StatementWind-driven coastal upwelling is important for supplying nutrients to phytoplankton at the base of marine ecosystems. This study uses simple models to investigate factors that determine where upwelling of water into the surface layer occurs when wind blows along the coastline. With a larger difference in density between the surface and bottom layers, a steeply sloping seafloor, and at latitudes closer to the equator, the upwelling region shifts farther offshore because of the strength and location of faster ocean currents that flow along the coastline.more » « less
 An official website of the United States government
An official website of the United States government 
				
			 
					 
					
 
                                    