Frontiers in Marine Science (Nov 2019)

Characteristics of an Advective Marine Heatwave in the Middle Atlantic Bight in Early 2017

  • Glen Gawarkiewicz,
  • Ke Chen,
  • Jacob Forsyth,
  • Jacob Forsyth,
  • Frank Bahr,
  • Anna M. Mercer,
  • Aubrey Ellertson,
  • Paula Fratantoni,
  • Harvey Seim,
  • Sara Haines,
  • Lu Han

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00712
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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There has been wide interest in Marine Heatwaves and their ecological consequences in recent years. Most analyses have focused on remotely sensed sea surface temperature data due to the temporal and spatial coverage it provides in order to establish the presence and duration of Heatwaves. Using hydrographic data from a variety of sources, we show that an advective Marine Heatwave was initiated by an event in late December of 2016 south of New England, with temperature anomalies measuring up to 6°C and salinity anomalies exceeding 1 PSU. Similar features were observed off of New Jersey in February 2017, and are associated with the Shelfbreak Front migrating from its normal position to mid-shelf or further onshore. Shelf water of 34 PSU was observed just north of Cape Hatteras at the 30 m isobath and across the continental shelf in late April 2017. These observations reveal that the 2017 Marine Heatwave was associated with a strong positive salinity anomaly, that its total duration was approximately 4 months, and its advective path extended roughly 850 km along the length of the continental shelf in the Middle Atlantic Bight. The southward advective velocity implied by the arrival north of Cape Hatteras is consistent with previous estimates of alongshelf velocity for the region. The origin of this Marine Heatwave is likely related to cross-shelf advection driven by the presence of a Warm Core Ring adjacent to the shelfbreak south of New England.

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