Seasonal evolution of the upper-ocean adjacent to the South
Orkney Islands, Southern Ocean: results from a "lazy biological mooring"
Michael P. Meredith, Keith W. Nicholls, Ian A. Renfrew, Lars
Boehme, Martin Biuw and Mike Fedak
A serendipitous >8-month time series of hydrographic
properties was obtained from the vicinity of the South Orkney Islands, Southern
Ocean, by tagging a southern elephant seal (Mirounga leonina) on Signy Island
wit a Conductivity-Temperature-Depth / Satellite-Relay Data Logger (CTD-SRDL)
in March 2007. Such a time series
(including data from the austral autumn and winter) would have been extremely
difficult to obtain via other means, and it illustrates with unprecedented temporal
resolution the seasonal progression of upper-ocean water mass properties and
stratification at this location.
Sea ice production values of around 0.15-0.4 m/month from April to July
were inferred from the progression of salinity, with significant levels still
in September (around 0.2 m/month).
However, these values presume that advective processes have negligible
effect on the salinity changes observed locally; this presumption is seen to be
inappropriate in this case, and it is argued that the ice production rates
inferred are better considered as "smeared averages" for the region of the
northwestern Weddell Sea upstream from the South Orkneys. The impact of such advective effects is
illustrated by contrasting the observed hydrographic series with the output of
a one-dimensional model of the upper-ocean forced with local fluxes. It is found that the difference in
magnitude between local (modelled) and regional (inferred) ice production is
significant, with estimates differing by around a factor of two. A halo of markedly low sea ice
concentration around the South Orkneys during the austral winter offers a
partial explanation for this, since it enabled stronger atmosphere/ocean fluxes
to persist and hence stronger ice production to prevail locally compared with
the upstream region. The year
of data collection was an El Niño year, and it is well-established that this
phenomenon can impact strongly on the surface ocean and ice field in this
sector of the Southern Ocean, thus the possibility of our time series being
atypical cannot be ruled out.
Longer-term collection of in situ ocean data from this locality would be
desirable, to address issues relating to interannual variability and
long-term change.
STATUS UPDATE
07/14/09: Acceptance letter
sent to corresponding author.