Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget

Currently, the most rapid increase in near-surface air temperature takes place in the Arctic, accompanied by a decline in sea ice cover. Consequently, the underwater shortwave radiation, and thus, the type and amount of phytoplankton are changing. In this context, the thawing permafrost, accompanied...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pefanis, Vasileios
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Universität Bremen 2021
Subjects:
550
Ice
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.26092/elib/646
https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/4849
id ftdatacite:10.26092/elib/646
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Arctic Ocean
CDOM
radiative heating
chlorophyll-a
Laptev Sea
Nordic Seas
coloured dissolved organic matter
sea ice
suspended material
phytoplankton
light
radiative transfer model
MITgcm
SCIATRAN
550
spellingShingle Arctic Ocean
CDOM
radiative heating
chlorophyll-a
Laptev Sea
Nordic Seas
coloured dissolved organic matter
sea ice
suspended material
phytoplankton
light
radiative transfer model
MITgcm
SCIATRAN
550
Pefanis, Vasileios
Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget
topic_facet Arctic Ocean
CDOM
radiative heating
chlorophyll-a
Laptev Sea
Nordic Seas
coloured dissolved organic matter
sea ice
suspended material
phytoplankton
light
radiative transfer model
MITgcm
SCIATRAN
550
description Currently, the most rapid increase in near-surface air temperature takes place in the Arctic, accompanied by a decline in sea ice cover. Consequently, the underwater shortwave radiation, and thus, the type and amount of phytoplankton are changing. In this context, the thawing permafrost, accompanied by increased precipitation and freshwater discharge, is expected to result in higher loads of coloured dissolved organic matter (CDOM) and total suspended matter (TSM) entering the Arctic Ocean. The amount of these optically active water constituents determines how much light is absorbed in the surface waters and how much can reach greater depths, affecting the vertical distribution of heat. In this thesis, I first examine the potential of CDOM and TSM in enhancing the radiative heating and sea ice melting in the shelf waters of the Laptev Sea, an area heavily influenced by one of the largest river systems in the Arctic region. By using in situ observations, I simulate the in-water radiative heating utilizing coupled atmosphere-ocean radiative transfer modelling (RTM). The results indicate that CDOM and TSM highly affect the energy budget of the Laptev Sea shelf waters, absorbing most of the solar energy in the first 2 meters of the water column. The increased absorbed energy leads to higher sea ice melt rates and changes in the heat exchange with the atmosphere. By using satellite remote sensing and RTM, I quantify the spatial distribution of radiative heating in the Laptev Sea for a typical summer day. The spatial patterns of radiative heating closely follow the distribution of the optically active water constituents, with the highest energy absorption occurring over river-influenced waters. As a next step, I upscale the previous one-dimensional and regional study by means of general circulation modelling for the entire Arctic Mediterranean Sea. By operating an ocean biogeochemical model coupled to a general circulation model with sea ice (Darwin-MITgcm), the effect of phytoplankton and CDOM is incorporated into the in-water shortwave radiation penetration scheme. Accounting for their radiative effect increases the sea surface temperature (SST) in summer, decreases the sea ice concentration, and induces more heat loss to the atmosphere, primarily through sensible and latent heat flux. In some parts of the Eastern Arctic, the sea ice season is reduced by up to one month. CDOM drives 48% of the summertime changes in SST, suggesting that an increase in its concentration will amplify the observed Arctic surface warming. Additionally, the CDOM effect alters the vertical diffusion, advection, and non-local vertical mixing of heat. The shortwave heating and vertical diffusion terms account for a large part of the Arctic-wide changes in the heat budget throughout the year. On the contrary, in the Atlantic sector, differences in the sub-surface heating can be largely determined by advective and non-local mixing processes in spring and winter. In the Norwegian Sea, the sub-surface wintertime indirect dynamical effect is 2.7 times larger than the effect of shortwave heating. These results underline the potential of indirect changes in advective and mixing processes in intensifying or dumping the direct effect of CDOM at the sub-surface. The changes induced by CDOM feed back on phytoplankton and CDOM itself, leading to higher annual mean surface concentrations for both of them. On the contrary, phytoplankton reduces at the sub-surface resulting in a 16.6% overall biomass decrease in the upper 100 m. The areas where light limits phytoplankton growth, expand at the expense of nutrient limitation. In spring, reduced light availability causes a phytoplankton bloom delay and an increase in nutrient concentrations. However, in summer the excess of nutrients together with the light limitation confine phytoplankton growth in a few tens of meters from the ocean surface leading to an intensification and delay of the end of the bloom, especially at the Barents Sea. These findings indicate that a future increase of CDOM will ignite a secondary positive feedback mechanism on the Arctic’s surface warming, through increased phytoplankton and CDOM light absorption close to the surface. Annotation: The Arctic Mediterranean Sea comprises the Arctic Ocean and the Greenland, Iceland and Norwegian (the Nordic) Seas.
format Thesis
author Pefanis, Vasileios
author_facet Pefanis, Vasileios
author_sort Pefanis, Vasileios
title Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget
title_short Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget
title_full Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget
title_fullStr Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget
title_full_unstemmed Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget
title_sort loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the arctic mediterranean sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget
publisher Universität Bremen
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.26092/elib/646
https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/4849
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Greenland
Laptev Sea
Norwegian Sea
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Greenland
Laptev Sea
Norwegian Sea
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Greenland
Ice
Iceland
laptev
Laptev Sea
Nordic Seas
Norwegian Sea
permafrost
Phytoplankton
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Greenland
Ice
Iceland
laptev
Laptev Sea
Nordic Seas
Norwegian Sea
permafrost
Phytoplankton
Sea ice
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Germany
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/de/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26092/elib/646
_version_ 1766321287768047616
spelling ftdatacite:10.26092/elib/646 2023-05-15T14:50:15+02:00 Loading of coloured dissolved organic matter in the Arctic Mediterranean Sea and its effects on the ocean heat budget Pefanis, Vasileios 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.26092/elib/646 https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/4849 en eng Universität Bremen Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Germany http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/de/ CC-BY-NC Arctic Ocean CDOM radiative heating chlorophyll-a Laptev Sea Nordic Seas coloured dissolved organic matter sea ice suspended material phytoplankton light radiative transfer model MITgcm SCIATRAN 550 Thesis Other Dissertation thesis 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.26092/elib/646 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Currently, the most rapid increase in near-surface air temperature takes place in the Arctic, accompanied by a decline in sea ice cover. Consequently, the underwater shortwave radiation, and thus, the type and amount of phytoplankton are changing. In this context, the thawing permafrost, accompanied by increased precipitation and freshwater discharge, is expected to result in higher loads of coloured dissolved organic matter (CDOM) and total suspended matter (TSM) entering the Arctic Ocean. The amount of these optically active water constituents determines how much light is absorbed in the surface waters and how much can reach greater depths, affecting the vertical distribution of heat. In this thesis, I first examine the potential of CDOM and TSM in enhancing the radiative heating and sea ice melting in the shelf waters of the Laptev Sea, an area heavily influenced by one of the largest river systems in the Arctic region. By using in situ observations, I simulate the in-water radiative heating utilizing coupled atmosphere-ocean radiative transfer modelling (RTM). The results indicate that CDOM and TSM highly affect the energy budget of the Laptev Sea shelf waters, absorbing most of the solar energy in the first 2 meters of the water column. The increased absorbed energy leads to higher sea ice melt rates and changes in the heat exchange with the atmosphere. By using satellite remote sensing and RTM, I quantify the spatial distribution of radiative heating in the Laptev Sea for a typical summer day. The spatial patterns of radiative heating closely follow the distribution of the optically active water constituents, with the highest energy absorption occurring over river-influenced waters. As a next step, I upscale the previous one-dimensional and regional study by means of general circulation modelling for the entire Arctic Mediterranean Sea. By operating an ocean biogeochemical model coupled to a general circulation model with sea ice (Darwin-MITgcm), the effect of phytoplankton and CDOM is incorporated into the in-water shortwave radiation penetration scheme. Accounting for their radiative effect increases the sea surface temperature (SST) in summer, decreases the sea ice concentration, and induces more heat loss to the atmosphere, primarily through sensible and latent heat flux. In some parts of the Eastern Arctic, the sea ice season is reduced by up to one month. CDOM drives 48% of the summertime changes in SST, suggesting that an increase in its concentration will amplify the observed Arctic surface warming. Additionally, the CDOM effect alters the vertical diffusion, advection, and non-local vertical mixing of heat. The shortwave heating and vertical diffusion terms account for a large part of the Arctic-wide changes in the heat budget throughout the year. On the contrary, in the Atlantic sector, differences in the sub-surface heating can be largely determined by advective and non-local mixing processes in spring and winter. In the Norwegian Sea, the sub-surface wintertime indirect dynamical effect is 2.7 times larger than the effect of shortwave heating. These results underline the potential of indirect changes in advective and mixing processes in intensifying or dumping the direct effect of CDOM at the sub-surface. The changes induced by CDOM feed back on phytoplankton and CDOM itself, leading to higher annual mean surface concentrations for both of them. On the contrary, phytoplankton reduces at the sub-surface resulting in a 16.6% overall biomass decrease in the upper 100 m. The areas where light limits phytoplankton growth, expand at the expense of nutrient limitation. In spring, reduced light availability causes a phytoplankton bloom delay and an increase in nutrient concentrations. However, in summer the excess of nutrients together with the light limitation confine phytoplankton growth in a few tens of meters from the ocean surface leading to an intensification and delay of the end of the bloom, especially at the Barents Sea. These findings indicate that a future increase of CDOM will ignite a secondary positive feedback mechanism on the Arctic’s surface warming, through increased phytoplankton and CDOM light absorption close to the surface. Annotation: The Arctic Mediterranean Sea comprises the Arctic Ocean and the Greenland, Iceland and Norwegian (the Nordic) Seas. Thesis Arctic Arctic Ocean Barents Sea Greenland Ice Iceland laptev Laptev Sea Nordic Seas Norwegian Sea permafrost Phytoplankton Sea ice DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Arctic Ocean Barents Sea Greenland Laptev Sea Norwegian Sea