Biogeosciences (Jan 2024)

Uncertainty in the evolution of northwestern North Atlantic circulation leads to diverging biogeochemical projections

  • K. Rutherford,
  • K. Rutherford,
  • K. Fennel,
  • L. Garcia Suarez,
  • J. G. John,
  • J. G. John

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-21-301-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21
pp. 301 – 314

Abstract

Read online

The global ocean's coastal areas are rapidly experiencing the effects of climate change. These regions are highly dynamic, with relatively small-scale circulation features like shelf break currents playing an important role. Projections can produce widely diverging estimates of future regional circulation structures. Here, we use the northwestern North Atlantic, a hotspot of ocean warming, as a case study to illustrate how the uncertainty in future estimates of regional circulation manifests itself and affects projections of shelf-wide biogeochemistry. Two diverging climate model projections are considered and downscaled using a high-resolution regional model with intermediate biogeochemical complexity. The two resulting future scenarios exhibit qualitatively different circulation structures by 2075 where along-shelf volume transport is reduced by 70 % in one of them and while remaining largely unchanged in the other. The reduction in along-shelf transport creates localized areas with either amplified warming (+3 ∘C) and salinification (+0.25 units) or increased acidification (−0.25 units) in shelf bottom waters. Our results suggest that a wide range of outcomes is possible for continental margins and suggest a need for accurate projections of small-scale circulation features like shelf break currents in order to improve the reliability of biogeochemical projections.