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Tidal to decadal scale hydrodynamics at two contrasting cold-water coral sites in the Northeast Atlantic

  • Christian Mohn
  • , Jorgen Hansen
  • , Marina Carreiro-Silva
  • , Stuart Cunningham
  • , Evert de Froe
  • , Carlos Dominguez-Carrio
  • , Stefan Gary
  • , Ronnie Glud
  • , Cordula Goke
  • , Clare Louise Johnson
  • , Telmo Morato
  • , Eva Moller
  • , Lorenzo Rovelli
  • , Kristin Schulz
  • , Karline Soetaert
  • , Anna van der Kaaden
  • , Dick van Oevelen

科研成果: Article同行评审

11 引用 (Scopus)
162 下载量 (Pure)

摘要

Cold-water corals (CWCs) thrive in areas with complex and rough topography favoring the development of highly diverse benthic communities. Several biotic and abiotic factors including organic matter supply, temperature, bottom roughness and currents are important drivers of ecosystem structure and functioning in deep-sea environments at different spatial and temporal scales. Little is known, however, how basin-scale changes in the ocean climate affect these drivers at local scales. Here, we use high-resolution implementations of the hydrodynamic model ROMS-AGRIF for estimating characteristic spatial and temporal scales of local hydrodynamics in response to variations of basin-scale currents imposed by distinct changes of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in the past century. We focus on two CWC communities on the SE Rockall Bank slope and at Condor Seamount. We considered two contrasting AMOC states that were identified from the 1958–2009 hindcast of the 1/20° resolution VIKING20 North Atlantic basin-scale ocean circulation model and used as boundary conditions for the high-resolution local area models. At SE Rockall Bank, variability of near-bottom currents in both regions was largely dominated by tidal dynamics, but strongly modified by AMOC induced basin-scale variations of water mass properties and bottom currents. During strong AMOC years, waters in the main CWC depth corridor (600–1200 m) were cooler and less saline but were dominated by stronger bottom currents when compared with conditions during weak AMOC years. At Condor Seamount, bottom currents were largely unaffected by AMOC related changes close to the summit at water depths < 400 m. Kinetic energy dissipation rates derived from the 3D near-bottom velocity field appeared to positively relate with the in-situ CWC distribution. Kinetic energy dissipation is therefore proposed as a mechanistic descriptor of CWC presence as it provides a more mechanistic view of hydrodynamics driving organic matter supply to filter and suspension-feeding communities.
源语言English
文章编号103031
页数19
期刊Progress in Oceanography
214
早期在线日期6 5月 2023
DOI
出版状态Published - 1 6月 2023

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