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Rain triggers seasonal stratification in a temperate shelf sea

Earth Sciences

Rain triggers seasonal stratification in a temperate shelf sea

J. E. Jardine, M. Palmer, et al.

This groundbreaking study reveals a surprising twist on storms and shelf sea stratification, showing that rain can enhance surface buoyancy and trigger seasonal stratification—88% of the time! Conducted by J. E. Jardine and colleagues, this research has profound implications for marine ecosystems under changing storm patterns.... show more
Abstract
The North Atlantic Storm Track acts as a conveyor belt for extratropical cyclones that frequently deliver high winds and rainfall to northwest European shelf seas. Storms are primarily considered detrimental to shelf sea stratification due to wind-driven mixing countering thermal buoyancy, but their impact on shelf scale stratification cycles remains poorly understood. Here, we show that storms trigger stratification through enhanced surface buoyancy from rainfall. A multidecadal model confirms that rainfall contributed to triggering seasonal stratification 88% of the time from 1982 to 2015. Stratification could be further modulated by large-scale climate oscillations, such as the Atlantic Multidecadal Variability (AMV), with stratification onset dates being twice as variable during a positive AMV phase than a negative one. Further insights into how changing storm activity will impact shelf seas are discussed beyond the current view of increasing wind-driven mixing, with significant implications for marine productivity and ecosystem function.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jun 02, 2023
Authors
J. E. Jardine, M. Palmer, C. Mahaffey, J. Holt, S. L. Wakelin, A. Düsterhus, J. Sharples, J. Wihsgott
Tags
storms
shelf sea stratification
rainfall
buoyancy
Atlantic Multidecadal Variability
marine productivity
ecosystem function
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