The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic

Ekman suction and pumping are often invoked to explain the observed difference in primary production and chlorophyll a between the North Atlantic subpolar and subtropical gyres. Between the gyres, the intergyre region can be loosely defined by its lack of a strong Ekman suction or pumping of nutrien...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Peabody, Ryan James
Other Authors: Lozier, Susan
Format: Master Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17033
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spelling ftdukeunivdsp:oai:localhost:10161/17033 2023-11-12T04:21:43+01:00 The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic Peabody, Ryan James Lozier, Susan 2018 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17033 unknown https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17033 Physical oceanography Biological oceanography Marine biogeochemistry Marine primary production Nutrient transport Master's thesis 2018 ftdukeunivdsp 2023-10-17T09:42:02Z Ekman suction and pumping are often invoked to explain the observed difference in primary production and chlorophyll a between the North Atlantic subpolar and subtropical gyres. Between the gyres, the intergyre region can be loosely defined by its lack of a strong Ekman suction or pumping of nutrients. Despite the lack of a strong Ekman supply of nutrients, the mean seasonal cycle in chlorophyll a in the intergyre is remarkably similar to that seen in the subpolar gyre. In this thesis, we present research on mechanisms for nutrient supply to the intergyre that might support its high production. Using biogeochemical and physical reanalysis ocean data products, a nutrient budget is constructed for a region in the eastern North Atlantic, within the intergyre. Analysis of this budget shows that the seasonal entrainment flux, resultant from the movement of the mixed layer across vertical nutrient gradients, is responsible for the majority of the nutrient supply to the region. Hydrographic ocean data and particle trajectories run in a numerical model are then used to show that the waters seasonally entrained into the intergyre mixed layer likely originate in the Gulf Stream, linking nutrient supply in the North Atlantic intergyre to high downstream nutrient fluxes observed in the Gulf Stream. Master Thesis North Atlantic Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace
institution Open Polar
collection Duke University Libraries: DukeSpace
op_collection_id ftdukeunivdsp
language unknown
topic Physical oceanography
Biological oceanography
Marine biogeochemistry
Marine primary production
Nutrient transport
spellingShingle Physical oceanography
Biological oceanography
Marine biogeochemistry
Marine primary production
Nutrient transport
Peabody, Ryan James
The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic
topic_facet Physical oceanography
Biological oceanography
Marine biogeochemistry
Marine primary production
Nutrient transport
description Ekman suction and pumping are often invoked to explain the observed difference in primary production and chlorophyll a between the North Atlantic subpolar and subtropical gyres. Between the gyres, the intergyre region can be loosely defined by its lack of a strong Ekman suction or pumping of nutrients. Despite the lack of a strong Ekman supply of nutrients, the mean seasonal cycle in chlorophyll a in the intergyre is remarkably similar to that seen in the subpolar gyre. In this thesis, we present research on mechanisms for nutrient supply to the intergyre that might support its high production. Using biogeochemical and physical reanalysis ocean data products, a nutrient budget is constructed for a region in the eastern North Atlantic, within the intergyre. Analysis of this budget shows that the seasonal entrainment flux, resultant from the movement of the mixed layer across vertical nutrient gradients, is responsible for the majority of the nutrient supply to the region. Hydrographic ocean data and particle trajectories run in a numerical model are then used to show that the waters seasonally entrained into the intergyre mixed layer likely originate in the Gulf Stream, linking nutrient supply in the North Atlantic intergyre to high downstream nutrient fluxes observed in the Gulf Stream.
author2 Lozier, Susan
format Master Thesis
author Peabody, Ryan James
author_facet Peabody, Ryan James
author_sort Peabody, Ryan James
title The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic
title_short The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic
title_full The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic
title_fullStr The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed The Maintenance of High Primary Production in the Absence of Ekman Upwelling: The Supply of Nutrients to the Intergyre North Atlantic
title_sort maintenance of high primary production in the absence of ekman upwelling: the supply of nutrients to the intergyre north atlantic
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17033
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17033
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