4.7 Article

Long-Term Changes in the Water Mass Properties in the Balearic Channels Over the Period 1996-2019

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.640535

Keywords

water mass properties; linear trends; climate change; Balearic Channels; Western Mediterranean Transition

Funding

  1. research program RADMED (Series Temporales de Datos Oceanograficos del Mediterraneo) - Instituto Espanol de Oceanografia (IEO)
  2. Spanish Programa Estatal De I CD CI Orientada a Los Retos De La Sociedad through project SAGA: Flujos zonales en el Oceano Atlantico sur interior [RTI2018-100844-B-C32]

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The analysis of a 24-year time series of CTD casts in the Balearic Channels revealed long-term changes in water mass properties in the Western Mediterranean, including warming and salting of intermediate waters, and positive trends in temperature, salinity, and density of deep waters. The detection of long-term changes in the upper layer is challenging due to high temporal variability.
The analysis of a 24-year time series of Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD) casts collected in the Balearic Channels (1996-2019) has allowed detecting and quantifying long-term changes in water mass properties in the Western Mediterranean. For the complete period, the intermediate waters have experienced warming and salting at rates of 1.4 degrees C/100yr and 0.3-0.6/100yr for the Western Intermediate Water, and 1 degrees C/100yr and 0.3-0.4/100yr for the Levantine Intermediate Water. The density of these two water masses has not changed. The deep waters, defined as those denser than 29.1 kg/m(3), showed positive trends in temperature, salinity, and density (0.8 degrees C/100yr, 0.2/100yr, and 0.02 kg.m(-3)/100yr, respectively). The high temporal variability of the upper layer makes the detection of long-term changes more difficult. Nevertheless, combining CTD data with temperature data from the oceanographic station at L'Estartit and simulated data from the NCEP/NCAR reanalysis, it can be established that the Atlantic Water increased its temperature at a rate of 2.1-2.8 degrees C/100yr and likely its salinity at a rate of 0.6/100yr. The water column absorbed heat at a rate equivalent to 1-1.2 W/m(2). All these trends are much higher than those reported in previous works (more than double in some cases). The warming of the water column produced an increase in the thermosteric component of sea level. However, this increase was compensated by the decrease in the halosteric component. Besides these changes, other alterations related to the Western Mediterranean Transition have been observed over shorter periods. The temperature and salinity of the intermediate waters increased before the winter of 2004/2005 and then the temperature and salinity of the deep waters increased dramatically in 2005. The density of the deep water reached values unprecedented before 2005. Deep and intermediate waters were uplifted by the presence of such dense deep waters. The arrival of warmer and saltier intermediate waters from the Eastern Mediterranean is also observed, mainly after 2010.

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