Anomalous warming of sea surface temperature in the Eastern Subtropical North Atlantic. Causes and Consequences

The Canary Basin, which encloses the subtropical eastern North Atlantic, is dominated in surface waters by the presence of the Azores Current, the Canary Current and the Canary Upwelling Current. Although extensive work has been done in the area to understand the local dynamics, some oceanographical...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tassin, Djemila
Other Authors: Izquierdo González, Alfredo, Cianca, Andrés, Física Aplicada
Format: Bachelor Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10498/20759
Description
Summary:The Canary Basin, which encloses the subtropical eastern North Atlantic, is dominated in surface waters by the presence of the Azores Current, the Canary Current and the Canary Upwelling Current. Although extensive work has been done in the area to understand the local dynamics, some oceanographical phenomena remain partially unexplained. Following specific events of unusually high sea surface temperature recorded in the Canary Basin during 2017, the causes of this anomaly have been investigated. Here, the starting point is a long-term mooring, the European Station for Time series in the Ocean Canary Islands (ESTOC) which is found north of the Canary Islands. With moored ADCP, surface current velocities, among others, parameters are measured. In this work, a time series from April to September 2017 is used. The observations are analyzed and compared to a climatology based on the Simple Ocean Data Assimilation (SODA) reanalysis. The principal finding is an anomalous northeastward flow, sustained from late April to late September. This flow was found to be in opposition to the usual southwestward Canary Current dominating the open ocean around the Canary Islands. The temperature recorded also showed anomalous maximum values during early summer. Those two anomalies combined are reported as an explanation for the unprecedent bloom of cyanobacteria Trichodesmium spp. Around the Canary Islands during 2017. In future studies, it would be very important to study the long- term recurrence of this king of events, due to the strong ecological and social impact of the anomalies recorded. La Cuenca de Canarias corresponde a la frontera este del giro subtropical del Atlántico Norte. La dinámica general superficial se encuentra dominada por la presencia de la corriente de Azores, la corriente de Canarias y la corriente Canaria de Upwelling. A pesar de las extensas investigaciones realizadas en el área, algunos acontecimientos específicos no han sido completamente explicados. Unos eventos de anomalía positiva de la ...