4.7 Article

Where and How the East Madagascar Current Retroflection Originates?

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 126, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JC016203

Keywords

EMC; retroflection; eddies; SICC; bloom phytoplankton; Indian Ocean

Categories

Funding

  1. NRF SARCHi chair on Ocean Atmosphere Modeling
  2. GdRI-Sud CROCO project
  3. Nansen program
  4. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), section Earth and Life Sciences (ALW) through its ZKO Grant [839.08.431]
  5. CNES
  6. NASA
  7. Oregon State University

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The southern extension of the East Madagascar Current (EMC) can be classified into three states: early retroflection, canonical retroflection, and no retroflection. Understanding the influence of current strength and eddies on retroflection formation can help predict marine phenomena in the southern part of Madagascar.
The East Madagascar Current (EMC) is one of the western boundary currents of the South Indian Ocean. As such, it plays an important role in the climate system by transporting water and heat toward the pole and recirculating to the large-scale Indian Ocean through retroflection modes of its southern extension. Five cruise data sets and remote sensing data from different sensors are used to identify three states of the southern extension of the EMC: early retroflection, canonical retroflection, and no retroflection. Retroflections occur 47% of the time. EMC strength regulates the retroflection state, although impinged mesoscale eddies also contribute to retroflection formation. Early retroflection is linked with EMC volume transport. Anticyclonic eddies drifting from the central Indian Ocean to the coast favor early retroflection formation, anticyclonic eddies near the southern tip of Madagascar promote the generation of canonical retroflection, and no retroflection appears to be associated with a lower eddy kinetic energy (EKE). Knowledge of the EMC retroflection state could help predict (a) coastal upwelling south of Madagascar, (b) the southeastern Madagascar phytoplankton bloom, and (c) the formation of the South Indian Ocean Counter Current (SICC).

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