Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Duteil O., Lazar Alban, Dandonneau Yves, Wainer I., Menkès Christophe. (2009). Deep chlorophyll maximum and upper ocean structure interactions : case of the Guinea Thermal Dome. Journal of Marine Research, 67 (2), p. 239-271. ISSN 0022-2402.

Titre du document
Deep chlorophyll maximum and upper ocean structure interactions : case of the Guinea Thermal Dome
Année de publication
2009
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000269375200007
Auteurs
Duteil O., Lazar Alban, Dandonneau Yves, Wainer I., Menkès Christophe
Source
Journal of Marine Research, 2009, 67 (2), p. 239-271 ISSN 0022-2402
Deep Chlorophyll Maximum (DCM) modifies the upper ocean heat capture distribution and thus impacts water column temperature and stratification, as well as biogeochemical processes. This energetical role of the DCM is assessed using a 1 m-resolution 1D physical-biogeochemical model of the upper ocean, using climatological forcing conditions of the Guinea Dome (GD). This zone has been chosen among others because a strong and shallow DCM is present all year round. The results show that the DCM warms the seasonal thermocline by +2 degrees C in September/October and causes an increase of heat transfer from below into the mixed layer (ML) by vertical diffusion and entrainment, leading to a ML warming of about 0.3 degrees C in October. In the permanent thermocline, temperature decreases by up to 2 degrees C. The result is a stratification increase of the water column by 0.3 degrees C m(-1) which improves the thermocline realism when compared with observations. At the same time, the heating associated with the DCM is responsible for an increase of nitrate (+300%, 0.024 mu M), chlorophyll (+50%, 0.02 mu g l(-1)) and primary production (+45%: 10 mg C m(-2) day(-1)) in the ML during the entrainment period of October. The considered concentrations are small but this mechanism could be potentially important to give a better explanation of why there is a significant amount of nitrate in the ML. The mechanisms associated with the DCM presence, no matter which temperature or biogeochemical tracers are concerned, are likely to occur in a wide range of tropical or subpolar regions; in these zones a pronounced DCM is present at least episodically at shallow or moderate depths. These results can be generalized to other thermal dome regions where relatively similar physical and biogeochemical structures are encountered. After testing different vertical resolutions (10 m, 5 m, 2.5 m, 1 m and 0.5 m), we show that using at least a 1 to vertical resolution model is mandatory to assess the energetical importance of the DCM.
Plan de classement
Limnologie physique / Océanographie physique [032]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010046355]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010046355
Contact