Publication Date:
2013-12-01
Description:
Subsurface salinity anomalies propagating between mid- and low latitudes along isopycnal surfaces have been shown to play an important role in modulating ocean and climate variability. In this study, a sustained freshening and southwestward propagation of subsurface salinity anomalies in the northwest Pacific subtropical gyre and its dynamical mechanism are investigated using observations, numerical outputs, and a predictive model. Analyses of the observations show a pronounced subsurface freshening with salinity decreasing about 0.25 PSU near the 24.5-σθ surface in the northwest Pacific subtropical gyre during 2003–11. This freshening is found to be related to the surface forcing of salinity anomalies in the outcrop zone (25°–35°N, 130°–160°E). A predictive model based on the assumption of salinity conservation along the outcrop isopycnals is derived and used to examine this surface-forcing mechanism. The resemblance between the spatial structures of the subsurface salinity derived from the predictive model and from observations and numerical outputs suggests that subsurface salinity anomalies are ventilated over the outcrop zone. A salinity anomaly with an amplitude of about 0.25 PSU generated by the surface forcing is subducted in the outcrop zone and then propagates southwestward, accompanied by potential vorticity anomalies, to the east of Luzon Strait (~15°N) in roughly one year. When the anomalies reach 15°N, they turn and move gradually eastward toward the central Pacific, associated with an eastward countercurrent on the southern subtropical gyre.
Print ISSN:
0022-3670
Electronic ISSN:
1520-0485
Topics:
Geosciences
,
Physics
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