Browsing by Author "Lu, Wenfang"
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Item Impact of Marine Heatwaves on Air-Sea CO2 Flux Along the US East Coast(Geophysical Research Letters, 2024-01-02) Edwing, Kelsea; Wu, Zelun; Lu, Wenfang; Li, Xinyu; Cai, Wei-Jun; Yan, Xiao-HaiMarine heatwaves (MHWs) are extremely warm ocean temperature events that significantly affect marine environments, but their effects on the coastal carbonate system are still uncertain. In this study, we systematically quantify MHWs' impacts on air-sea carbon dioxide (CO2) flux anomalies (FCO2′) in the Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB) and South Atlantic Bight (SAB) from 1992 to 2020. During the longest MHW in both regions, oceanic CO2 uptake capabilities substantially decreased, primarily due to significant increases in the seawater partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2sea). For all cases, MHWs played a more significant role in driving pCO2sea changes in the MAB than the SAB, where non-thermal drivers dominated pCO2sea variability. In the MAB, weakened wind speeds related to wintertime atmospheric perturbations increase ocean temperatures and pCO2sea, further reducing CO2 uptake during winter MHWs. This work is the first to connect extreme temperatures to coastal air-sea CO2 fluxes. The reduction in CO2 absorption noted during MHWs in this study has important implications for coastal regions to act as continued sinks for excess CO2 emissions in the atmosphere. Key Points - Marine heatwaves (MHWs) primarily generated positive sea surface pCO2 (pCO2sea) anomalies in the Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB) and South Atlantic Bight (SAB) but had a larger impact on air-sea CO2 flux anomalies in the MAB - Reduced wind speeds amplified MHW contributions during CO2 sink months and counteracted them during CO2 source months - In the MAB, wintertime atmospheric perturbations related to zonal shifts in the jet stream produce slower wind speeds which aid in generating air-sea heat flux type MHW events that ultimately reduce oceanic CO2 uptake Plain Language Summary The transfer of carbon dioxide (CO2) between the atmosphere and ocean is sensitive to sea surface temperature (SST) changes because warmer SSTs increase the sea surface partial pressure of CO2 and reduce the ocean's ability to absorb CO2 from the atmosphere. It is, therefore, conceivable that marine heatwaves (MHWs), which are extremely warm ocean temperature events, could modify how carbon moves between the ocean and the atmosphere. This study provides the first attempt to evaluate the impacts of MHWs on the air-sea CO2 flux (FCO2) anomalies along the US East Coast, encompassing the Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB) and South Atlantic Bight (SAB) during 1992–2020. Both regions experienced reduced CO2 absorption in response to the longest MHWs in each region. These extreme temperatures had a larger impact on CO2 absorption in the MAB compared to the SAB, where non-temperature factors were more influential. The coastal ocean plays an important role in helping to mitigate human-induced climate change by absorbing excess CO2 from the atmosphere. As such, the demonstrated reduced absorption of the ocean associated with MHWs in this study, which might also apply to other coastal locations, has vital implications for the efficiency of the ocean in offsetting global warming impacts.Item Physical modulation to the biological production in the South China Sea: a physical-biological coupled model approach(University of Delaware, 2017) Lu, WenfangSouth China Sea (SCS) is a typical marginal sea with the characteristics of open ocean. This distinct property makes SCS an ideal environment to study the modulation mechanisms from various physical processes to the marine biogeochemical (BGC) system. In order to comprehensively investigate the role of various physical processes, such as oceanic circulation, mesoscale eddies, atmospheric forcing, and oceanic fronts, two case studies were conducted in this dissertation with focus on the two hotspots identified by reviewing previous literatures on the BGC systems of the SCS, i.e., winter bloom in the Luzon Strait (referred as LZB), and the summer Vietnam boundary upwelling system (VBUS). ☐ For the case study on the LZB, a coupled physical-biological (TFOR-NPZD) model was developed in order to study the mechanisms. Based on a simulation for 2010, the results showed that the TFOR-NPZD model was capable of reproducing the key features of the LZB, such as the location, inverted-V shape, twin-core structure and bloom intensity. The simulation showed that the LZB was triggered during the relaxation period of intensified northeasterly winds of the winter monsoon, when the deepened mixed layer started to shoal. Nutrient diagnostics showed that vertical mixing was responsible for the nutrient supply to the upper ~40 m layer, while subsurface upwelling supplied nutrients to the region below the mixed layer. Hydrodynamic diagnostics showed that the advection of relative vorticity (RV) primarily contributed to the subsurface upwelling. The RV advection was resulted from an offshore jet, which was associated with a northeasterly wind, flowed across the ambient RV field. ☐ For the process-oriented case study on the VBUS, investigation on the remote sensing data revealed a tight spatio-temporal covariance of the biological productivity and the circulation. High level of biological production was associated with high level of surface current intensity, which accounted for ~12% of the variability in the production. A coupled physical-biological (TFOR-CoSiNE) model with the emphasis on the mesoscale phenomena was developed to study the detailed processes in VBUS. Validation against satellite and in-situ data suggested that the capability of the model system in reproducing the key features of the summer VBUS, including the positive contribution from the circulation. Inspection into the model results highlighted the circulation’s role in local BGC system, where the separation and the anticyclone pattern from the circulation were favorable for the recycling of the nutrients. The weakened circulation was associated with an abnormal non-separated circulation pattern, which would leak the organic matters and reduce the nutrient inventory in the VBUS. In a numerical experiment where the circulation was manipulated presenting a weak tendency of separation, the nitrate inventory could be reduced by ~25% while the production reduced by ~16%, demonstrating the significance of the circulation’s role. ☐ The previous two case studies demonstrate that the above-mentioned physical processes not only redistribute the water with high biological productivity, but also systematically modify the source-and-sink pattern of nutrient (mainly nitrogen) as the most important limiting factor of biological production in the oligotrophic SCS. By inducing vertical motion of water mass and horizontal transport of high nutrient coastal water, physical processes fuel the nutrient available for biological production in the upper layer via various mechanisms. Thus, the BGC cycle in the SCS is highly modulated by the physical dynamical processes.Item Rapid Sea Level Rise in the Tropical Southwest Indian Ocean in the Recent Two Decades(Geophysical Research Letters, 2023-12-27) Huang, Lei; Zhuang, Wei; Lu, Wenfang; Zhang, Yang; Edwing, Deanna; Yan, Xiao-HaiIt has been reported that the sea level falls in the tropical Southwest Indian Ocean (SWIO) from the 1960s to the early 2000s. However, a rising trend of 4.05 ± 0.56 cm/decade has occurred during the recent two decades with our analysis showing that manometric sea level contributes 41% to this sea level rise. 30% of this rise is due to steric sea level (SSL) change in the upper 2,000 m with SSL rise in the upper 300 m of secondary importance. Conversely, thermal expansion below the thermocline (300–2,000 m), likely caused by water mass spread from the Southern Ocean, induces major contribution to SSL changes. Compared to existing studies demonstrating the contribution of thermal variations above the thermocline to sea level variability in the tropical SWIO, this study emphasizes the importance of ocean mass and deeper ocean changes in a warming climate. Key Points - Rapid sea level rise occurs in the tropical Southwest Indian Ocean (SWIO) since the early 2000s - The ocean mass addition and the upper 2,000 m ocean warming contribute significantly to the total sea level rise - The upper 2,000 m ocean warming is primarily attributed to thermal expansion below the thermocline associated with the spread of water masses Plain Language Summary Global ocean sea level change is spatially and temporally nonuniform due to oceanic and atmospheric dynamics. The tropical Southwest Indian Ocean (SWIO) experienced a sea level fall from the 1960s to the early 2000s. However, a rapid sea level rise has occurred over the last two decades in the tropical SWIO that is faster than the global average. The ocean mass increase due to extra water input leads to an essential impact on sea level rise in the tropical SWIO. Compared to previous studies demonstrating the effect of thermal expansion in the upper 300 m, this study shows larger contributions from deeper ocean (300–2,000 m) warming over the past two decades. Overall, this study highlights the importance of ocean mass and deeper water thermal structure in regulating tropical SWIO sea level rise in a changing climate, as well as the need for observations and direct assessment of the abyssal ocean beneath 2,000 m.Item Unabated Global Ocean Warming Revealed by Ocean Heat Content from Remote Sensing Reconstruction(Remote Sensing, 2023-01-17) Su, Hua; Wei, Yanan; Lu, Wenfang; Yan, Xiao-Hai; Zhang, HongshengAs the most relevant indicator of global warming, the ocean heat content (OHC) change is tightly linked to the Earth’s energy imbalance. Therefore, it is vital to study the OHC and heat absorption and redistribution. Here we analyzed the characteristics of global OHC variations based on a previously reconstructed OHC dataset (named OPEN) with four other gridded OHC datasets from 1993 to 2021. Different from the other four datasets, the OPEN dataset directly obtains OHC through remote sensing, which is reliable and superior in OHC reconstruction, further verified by the Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) radiation flux data. We quantitatively analyzed the changes in the upper 2000 m OHC of the oceans over the past three decades from a multisource and multilayer perspective. Meanwhile, we calculated the global ocean heat uptake to quantify and track the global ocean warming rate and combined it with the Oceanic Niño Index to analyze the global evolution of OHC associated with El Niño–Southern Oscillation variability. The results show that different datasets reveal a continuously increasing and non-decaying global ocean warming from multiple perspectives, with more heat being absorbed by the subsurface and deeper ocean over the past 29 years. The global OHC heating trend from 1993 to 2021 is 7.48 ± 0.17, 7.89 ± 0.1, 10.11 ± 0.16, 7.78 ± 0.17, and 12.8 ± 0.26 × 1022 J/decade according to OPEN, IAP, EN4, Ishii, and ORAS5, respectively, which shows that the trends of the OPEN, IAP, and Ishii datasets are generally consistent, while those of EN4 and ORAS5 datasets are much higher. In addition, the ocean warming characteristics revealed by different datasets are somewhat different. The OPEN OHC dataset from remote sensing reconstruction shows a unique remote sensing mapping advantage, presenting a distinctive warming pattern in the East Indian Ocean. Meanwhile, the OPEN dataset had the largest statistically significant area, with 85.6% of the ocean covered by significant positive trends. The significant and continuous increase in global ocean warming over the past three decades, revealed from remote sensing reconstruction, can provide an important reference for projecting ocean warming in the context of global climate change toward the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.