Record Details

Irreversible nitrate fluxes due to turbulent mixing in a coastal upwelling system

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Irreversible nitrate fluxes due to turbulent mixing in a coastal upwelling system
Names Hales, Burke (creator)
Moum, James N. (creator)
Covert, P. (creator)
Perlin, A. (creator)
Date Issued 2005-10-13 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Detailed and repeated measurements of nitrate across the Oregon shelf, made
coincident with turbulence measurements, reveal the importance of cross-isopycnal
mixing via turbulence in providing nitrate to the upper water column. Spatial distributions
of vertical gradients and turbulent fluxes in the Oregon coastal ocean reveal variability that
could not have been resolved with traditional sampling approaches. Nitrate-rich near-bottom
waters are drawn up the shelf during upwelling and back down the shelf during
downwelling. Continuous turbulent mixing in the bottom boundary layer increases nitrate
on intermediate isopycnals by several μM toward the shelf. This increased nitrate is
consistent with measured turbulent flux of nitrate of O(0.1 μmol m⁻² s⁻¹) for a period of
3 days, roughly the timescale for changes in the wind and hence to the upwelling
circulation. Our flux estimates are consistent with high-biomass, nutrient-replete,
incubation-based primary productivity estimates in this area and suggest that turbulent
vertical nitrate transport plays a significant role in supporting the high productivity
seen here. Offshore of 30 m depth, we estimate the irreversible transport of nitrate from
nitrate-rich near-bottom waters to be about 25% of the rate at which it is provided by
upwelling. The total irreversible transport is greater by some unknown amount when we
consider the transport inshore of 30 m depth. We suggest that the onshore transport of
offshore water, whether deep water during upwelling or surface water during relaxation,
forces the juxtaposition of strong gradients and mixing regimes such that turbulent vertical
fluxes are consistently elevated in the shoreward reaches of the coastal ocean.
Genre Article
Topic nitrate flux
Identifier Hales , B., J. N. Moum, P. Covert, and A. Perlin (2005), Irreversible nitrate fluxes due to turbulent mixing in a coastal upwelling system, J. Geophys. Res., 110, C10S11.

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press