4.7 Article

Description and Mechanisms of the Mid-Year Upwelling in the Southern Caribbean Sea from Remote Sensing and Local Data

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse6020036

Keywords

coastal upwelling; SST; Caribbean Sea; Ekman transport; Ekman pumping; suction; wind curl; remote sensing; CARIACO Ocean Time-Series Program

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF, USA) [OCE-0752139, OCE-9216626, OCE-9729284, OCE-9401537, OCE-9729697, OCE-9415790, OCE-9711318, OCE-0326268, OCE 0963028]
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA, USA) [NAG5-6448, NAS5-97128]
  3. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnologicas (CONICIT, Venezuela) [96280221]
  4. Fondo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnologicas (FONACIT, Venezuela) [2000001702, 2011000353]
  5. Ley Orgonica de Ciencia, Tecnologia, e Innovacion (LOCTI, Venezuela) [CON-EDIMAR 23914]

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The southern Caribbean Sea experiences strong coastal upwelling between December and April due to the seasonal strengthening of the trade winds. A second upwelling was recently detected in the southeastern Caribbean during June-August, when local coastal wind intensities weaken. Using synoptic satellite measurements and in situ data, this mid-year upwelling was characterized in terms of surface and subsurface temperature structures, and its mechanisms were explored. The mid-year upwelling lasts 6-9 weeks with satellite sea surface temperature (SST) similar to 1-2 degrees C warmer than the primary upwelling. Three possible upwelling mechanisms were analyzed: cross-shore Ekman transport (csET) due to alongshore winds, wind curl (Ekman pumping/suction) due to wind spatial gradients, and dynamic uplift caused by variations in the strength/position of the Caribbean Current. These parameters were derived from satellite wind and altimeter observations. The principal and the mid-year upwelling were driven primarily by csET (78-86%). However, SST had similar or better correlations with the Ekman pumping/suction integrated up to 100 km offshore (W(E)100) than with csET, possibly due to its influence on the isopycnal depth of the source waters for the coastal upwelling. The mid-year upwelling was not caused by dynamic uplift but it might have been enhanced by the seasonal intensification of the Caribbean Current during that period.

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