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Ocean Observations Nandini Ocean Observations Nandini

Ocean Observations Nandini - PowerPoint Presentation

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Ocean Observations Nandini - PPT Presentation

Ramesh IPCC AR5 WG1 Climate Change 2013 The Physical Science Basis Seminar in Atmospheric Science 21 st February 2014 1 Introduction The ocean exchanges heat freshwater and C with the atmosphere ID: 708756

amp ocean north heat ocean amp heat north atlantic pacific trend content warming global change confidence sea measurements rate

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Slide1

Ocean Observations

Nandini Ramesh

IPCC AR5 WG1 - Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis

Seminar in Atmospheric Science 21

st

February, 2014Slide2

1. Introduction

The ocean exchanges heat, freshwater, and C with the atmosphere.Large heat capacity

Currently storing 30% of our C emissionsLarge heat capacity + inertia = the ocean “integrates” short term variability. This makes it a good indicator of long-term change.Less long-term coverage of ocean variables than for the atmosphere.Slide3

2. Ocean Temperature & Heat Content

Our observation system has changed over time and space

Data from 1970 onwards is fit for this analysis – therefore changes since 1971 are documented here.Biases in XBTs & MBTs have been corrected for since AR4. These produced spurious decadal variability.Differences in background climatology & how poorly-sampled regions are dealt with produce disagreement among estimates.

Upper ocean heat content (UOHC) changes on many

timescales, deep ocean only on long timescales.Slide4

Upper Ocean Temperature (<700 m)

Most warming in the North Atlantic

25-65N: consistent with

poleward

displacement of global temperature field

Southern Ocean – may be an

artefact

. Other

reanalyses

don’t have such strong warming; warming was stronger in the upper 1000 m of the SO between 1930 & 1970.

4% increase in density stratification

Arctic (not shown) has also undergone warming.Slide5

Upper Ocean Heat Content

Dips following volcanic eruptions of ‘63, ‘82, ‘91.

d/dt at < decadal scales is poorly constrained74-137 TW of heating depending on dataset2003-10 decrease in rate of change: uncertain because this was the time of transition from XBT to Argo.Slide6

Deep Ocean Temperature & Heat ContentSlide7

Deep Ocean Temperature & Heat Content

Very little data below 700 m!

We know that the global ocean (at 0-1500 m) warmed from 2005 to 2010.700-2000 m depth range contributes an estimated 30% of the total trend from 0 to 2000 m. (previous figure)Below 2000 m: only from transects. Estimates of heat content change are only feasible for the North Atlantic. 2000-3000 m: no significant trend 1992-2005

(likely)

Below 3000 m: Significant warming trend 1992-2005

(likely).

Most pronounced at ~4500 m: influence of AABWSlide8

AABW influence can be felt on

multidecadal timescales because of waves, not spreading.AABW warming may be due to recovery from cool 1970s Weddell

polynya. But measurements from further north suggest that warming started in ‘91.Net cooling trend in N Atlantic: highly variable on decadal timescales.

Deep Ocean Temperature & Heat ContentSlide9
Slide10

3. Changes in Salinity & Freshwater Content

Influenced by hydrological cycle, ocean dynamics and ice formation/melting

We don’t have good measurements of E or P over the ocean, but we do have salinity measurements.Reflects “rich-gets-richer” trend – very likelySlide11

Changes in Sea Surface SalinitySlide12
Slide13

Upper Ocean Salinity Changes

Salinity increases in the gyres.

Freshening of AAIW and SAMW

Atlantic: saltier. Pacific: fresher.

Fresher surface waters

 more stable stratification  alters ocean circulation. Western Tropical Pacific & North Pacific in particular.

Saltier Mediterranean has contributed to saltier Atlantic.

Freshening in the Arctic

(medium confidence)Slide14

4. Changes in Ocean Surface Fluxes

Exchanges of heat, water, & momentum (via wind stress) with the atmosphere.The accuracy of our measurements is insufficient to make inferences on a global scale.

Positive flux = into the ocean.A useful constraint: changes in ocean heat content. Net heat flux must be consistent with this.Slide15
Slide16

Small positive trend in ocean precipitation, but

low confidence.Slide17

Wind stress:

Southern Ocean: increase since the 1980s (medium confidence)

Tropical Pacific: increase since the 1990s

(medium confidence)

but this may be the IPO. Net decrease since 1860.

North Atlantic: Winter wind stress curl related to the NAO.

Poleward

shift of the zero wind stress curl line: low confidence.Slide18

Surface waves

Changes in Surface Wave Height of 8-10 cm/decade for North Pacific, 14 cm/decade for North Atlantic over 1900-2002 reported in AR4. More recent work: up to 20 cm/decade in the eastern/central North Pacific.

No trend in extreme waves.Satellite record is still too short to infer trends.Slide19

5. Changes in Water-mass Properties

North Pacific Intermediate Water: freshened.Antarctic Intermediate Water: dipole pattern. Cooler & fresher on lighter

isopycnals, warmer and more saline on denser isopycnals. Variability may also be linked to ENSO & SAM.Upper NADW: freshening from 1960-90; reversal after that. Heat entered during low NAO phase of the 60s.

Lower NADW: Net cooling – possibly due to entrainment of surrounding waters. Sparse data.

AABW: Warmed since the 80s or 90s. Export rate has decreased

(more likely than not)

. Indian & Pacific sectors have seen freshening; Atlantic has variability on

multidecadal

timescales. Smaller volume in the Atlantic is related to changes in mixing and not formation rates.Slide20
Slide21

6. Changes in Ocean Circulation

Velocity data is predominantly from Argo drifters.Measurements of SSH are from satellites – 1992 onwards.

Pacific: Intensification of the N subpolar gyre, S subtropical gyre, subtropical cells. Southward expansion of the N subtropical gyre because of the migration of the North Equatorial Current from 13o to 11

o

N. Southward shift of ACC.

Likely

to be decadal variability.

AMOC: likely to slow down. No net trend; weakened in 2009-10 but recovered soon after. Slide22
Slide23

Exchange between basins

Indonesian Throughflow

: Low confidence in a trend. Dominated by ENSO variability.ACC: poleward shift. Increases in wind stress have been compensated by eddies, and not changes in transport.

North Atlantic/Nordic:

No evidence of a trend.Slide24

7. Sea Level Change

Changes because of exchanges with land: melting of ice. Changes because of thermal expansion.

Spatial variations: tides, winds.Measured using tide gauges. Corrections need to be made for vertical land movement: isostatic adjustment, groundwater mining, tectonic activity, hydrocarbon extraction.Altimetry/tide gauges measure effects of both thermal expansion and addition of mass. GRACE has allowed us to estimate mass changes. Slide25

Significant progress made since AR4 on quantifying uncertainties in global mean sea level associated with VLM.

Change in estimate = one standard error. Interannual fluctuations due to ENSO.

The rate of thermosteric rise in sea level: 50% higher than estimated in AR4 (for 0-700m).Slide26
Slide27
Slide28
Slide29
Slide30

8. Ocean Biogeochemical Changes

Carbon

Ocean’s inorganic C reservoir is 50x that of the atmosphere. Even small perturbations to the ocean reservoir can have huge consequences for the atmosphere.CO2 uptake is measured from pCO2 difference across air-sea interface. Measurements are few: too much uncertainty to estimate a global trend. Estimates of global uptake rate: 1.9 [1.2 to 2.5]

PgC

/yr and 2 [1 to 3]

PgC

/yrSlide31

Increase in pCO2 in both atmosphere & ocean at all locations.

Faster increase in pCO2 in the ocean means oceanic uptake.

Uptake rates are strongly affected by ENSO and NAO.Slide32

Estimated using Transit Time Distribution method – based on CFC measurements.

Doesn’t include changes in biological productivity.Unlikely that there has been a decrease in net uptake rate of global sinks.Slide33

Highest storage rates in deep water formation regions.Slide34

Ocean Acidification

Surface waters are mildly basic: pH 7.8-8.4High confidence

that pH has decreased by 0.1 over the industrial era.Most acidification in the North Atlantic, least in subtropical South Pacific.Uptake of anthropogenic CO2 is the dominant cause of changes in seawater chemistry.Slide35
Slide36
Slide37
Slide38
Slide39

Oxygen

Oxygen concentrations are decreasing.15% attributable to warming (reduction in solubility of O2) and rest attributable to reduced downward mixing because of increased stratification.

North Pacific, North Atlantic, and Indian Ocean show decreases; Southern Ocean – studies disagree on the trends.Coastal regions are becoming hypoxic at a faster rate.Slide40

Nutrients

N-based fertilizers in runoff  high nutrient concentration in coastal waters 

eutrophication  more CO2 removal.Up to 3% of oceanic new production is because of this nitrogen source.Oligotrophic

provinces in the four basins grew by 0.8 – 4.3 % per year in 1998-2006. (from chlorophyll)

No published studies on long-term changes.Slide41

Synthesis

Substantial progress since AR4Virtually certain

that the upper 700 m have warmed. Very likely that 700-2000 m depth range contributed 30% of the total warming.Global mean sea level has risen by 19 cm since 1901. The rate of increase was higher during 1993-2010.Rise in mean sea level explains most extreme sea level increases.

Regional trends in salinity have

very likely

increased the salinity contrast.

Virtually certain

that the ocean is storing CO2;

very likely

that this has contributed to acidification.

Consistency between patterns of change across different parameters enhances confidence.

Circulation change: southward shift of the ACC.Slide42