4.7 Article

Surface water subduction during a downwelling event in a semienclosed bay

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 121, Issue 9, Pages 7088-7107

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016JC011950

Keywords

downwelling; subduction; spiciness; upwelling; Iberian; HAB

Categories

Funding

  1. Xunta de Galicia [PDIGIT05RMA40201PR]
  2. EU FEDER [0520_RAIA_CO_1_E]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity [STRAMIX CTM2012-35155, iSmall CTM2014-56119-R]
  4. Natural Environment Research Council [pml010010] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. NERC [pml010010] Funding Source: UKRI

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The Ria de Vigo is a bay strongly influenced by upwelling-downwelling cycles along the adjacent coast of NW Iberia. Moored and ship-board observations during September 2006 showed that subduction, initially associated with an estuarine circulation, strengthened when a strong downwelling circulation, resulting from northward wind over the coastal ocean, was generated in the outer Ria causing ambient waters to be advected outward in the lower layer. Incoming surface waters confined the estuarine circulation to the shallow interior and displaced isopleths downward through the water column at approximate to 10 m d(-1). As the estuarine circulation retreated inward, strong flow convergence developed between middle and inner ria in the layer above 15 m, while divergence developed beneath. The convergence increased through the period of downwelling-favorable wind at a rate consistent with the observed isopleth displacement velocities. The coefficient of turbulent diffusion K-t, from a microstructure profiler, indicated that mixing was strong in the estuarine circulation and subsequently in the downwelling zone, where localized instabilities and temperature-salinity inversions were observed. During the downwelling, concentrations of phytoplankton, including potentially harmful species, increased, especially in the middle and inner ria, as a result of inward advection, subduction, and the ability of the dinoflagellates to maintain their position in the water column by swimming. In the course of the 5 day event, the water mass of all but the innermost Ria was flushed completely and replaced by waters originating in the coastally trapped poleward flow along the Atlantic coastline.

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