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Vous êtes ici : Accueil / Bibliographie générale / Canary current upwelling: More or less?

E.D. Barton, D.B. Field, and C. Roy (2013)

Canary current upwelling: More or less?

Progress in Oceanography, 116:167–178.

Abstract It has been hypothesized that coastal upwelling in the four major eastern boundary current systems might be intensified as global warming could result in a greater land-sea temperature gradient and hence strengthen alongshore winds. Recent research has suggested a substantial increase of upwelling intensity off Northwest Africa. Evidence there is based on the derivation of a proxy for upper ocean temperatures from the alkenone unsaturation index ( U 37 K ′ ) derived from two sediment cores recovered off Cape Ghir, Morocco. An accelerating decrease of over 1 °C during the last century was concluded for near surface temperature near the Cape. Support for this conclusion was found in an increase in Bakun’s upwelling index for the same area. The evidence for a general intensification of upwelling within the whole Canary current upwelling system is examined here. Using available estimates of wind from PFEL, NCAR/NCEP, ECMWF, ICOADS and WASWind plus measured wind data from coastal meteorological stations, no evidence of a coherent intensification in winds at the regional scale off Northwest Africa is found. Moreover, sea surface temperature records from ships-of-opportunity (ICOADS data set) and also from the Pathfinder satellite AVHRR data set show a significant and correlated increase at all latitudes in the region, including in the area around Cape Ghir. It is concluded that there is no evidence for a general increase in upwelling intensity off Northwest Africa or Iberia. The apparent lowering of SST off Cape Ghir indicated by the alkenone unsaturation index can be explained by coccolithophorids (phytoplankton from which the U 37 K ′ signal is derived) living deeper in the water column. The distribution of most phytoplankton (including coccolithophorids) will deepen and have less overlap with mixed layer temperatures as the ocean warms, resulting in a near surface temperature estimate that is increasingly biased by subsurface temperatures and lower than the actual SST.

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