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Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds

The Agulhas Current plays a critical role in both local and global ocean circulation and climate regulation, yet the mechanisms that determine the seasonal cycle of the current remain poorly understood. Model studies predict an austral winter-spring maximum in poleward volume transport, whilst obser...

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Main Author: Hutchinson, Katherine
Other Authors: Penven, Pierrick
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute 2018
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hutchinson, Katherine
author2 Penven, Pierrick
author_browse Hutchinson, Katherine
Penven, Pierrick
author_facet Penven, Pierrick
Hutchinson, Katherine
author_sort Hutchinson, Katherine
collection Thesis
description The Agulhas Current plays a critical role in both local and global ocean circulation and climate regulation, yet the mechanisms that determine the seasonal cycle of the current remain poorly understood. Model studies predict an austral winter-spring maximum in poleward volume transport, whilst observations reveal an austral summertime (February-March) maximum. Here, the role of winds on Agulhas Current seasonality is investigated using shallow water models, satellite measurements, and a 23-year transport proxy based on observations. A one-and-a-half layer reduced gravity model is shown to successfully reproduce the seasonal phasing of the current. This seasonality is found to be highly sensitive to the propagation speed of Rossby waves, which determines the arrival time of the wind stress signal at the western boundary. By matching Rossby wave speeds to those observed using altimetry, an Agulhas Current with a maximum flow in February and a minimum flow in July is simulated, agreeing well with observations. Near-field winds, to the west of 35◦E, dominate this seasonality, as signals from more remote wind forcing dissipate due to destructive interference while crossing the basin. Local winds driving coastal upwelling/downwelling directly over the Agulhas cannot, alone, account for the observed seasonal phasing, as they force a NovemberDecember maximum and June minimum in flow. The seasonal response to Indian Ocean winds is also investigated using a barotropic (single layer) model with realistic topography. A barotropic adjustment cannot explain the observed Agulhas Current seasonality, predicting a wintertime maximum in transport. The results from the barotropic simulation are similar to previous model studies, where seasonality is dominated by a southward propagation of signals via the Mozambique Channel, suggesting that these models are too barotopic in their response to the winds. Findings from this study elucidate the role of near-field winds and baroclinic processes in determining the seasonality of the Agulhas Current.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/28357
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:05.164Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute
publisherStr Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/28357 Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds Hutchinson, Katherine Penven, Pierrick Beal, Lisa Ansorge, Isabel Hermes, Juliet marine Agulhas Current The Agulhas Current plays a critical role in both local and global ocean circulation and climate regulation, yet the mechanisms that determine the seasonal cycle of the current remain poorly understood. Model studies predict an austral winter-spring maximum in poleward volume transport, whilst observations reveal an austral summertime (February-March) maximum. Here, the role of winds on Agulhas Current seasonality is investigated using shallow water models, satellite measurements, and a 23-year transport proxy based on observations. A one-and-a-half layer reduced gravity model is shown to successfully reproduce the seasonal phasing of the current. This seasonality is found to be highly sensitive to the propagation speed of Rossby waves, which determines the arrival time of the wind stress signal at the western boundary. By matching Rossby wave speeds to those observed using altimetry, an Agulhas Current with a maximum flow in February and a minimum flow in July is simulated, agreeing well with observations. Near-field winds, to the west of 35◦E, dominate this seasonality, as signals from more remote wind forcing dissipate due to destructive interference while crossing the basin. Local winds driving coastal upwelling/downwelling directly over the Agulhas cannot, alone, account for the observed seasonal phasing, as they force a NovemberDecember maximum and June minimum in flow. The seasonal response to Indian Ocean winds is also investigated using a barotropic (single layer) model with realistic topography. A barotropic adjustment cannot explain the observed Agulhas Current seasonality, predicting a wintertime maximum in transport. The results from the barotropic simulation are similar to previous model studies, where seasonality is dominated by a southward propagation of signals via the Mozambique Channel, suggesting that these models are too barotopic in their response to the winds. Findings from this study elucidate the role of near-field winds and baroclinic processes in determining the seasonality of the Agulhas Current. 2018-08-31T11:42:15Z 2018-08-31T11:42:15Z 2018 2018-08-16T07:44:03Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28357 eng application/pdf Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle marine
Agulhas Current
Hutchinson, Katherine
Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds
title Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds
title_full Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds
title_fullStr Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds
title_full_unstemmed Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds
title_short Seasonality of the Agulhas Current with respect to near- and far-field winds
title_sort seasonality of the agulhas current with respect to near and far field winds
topic marine
Agulhas Current
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28357
work_keys_str_mv AT hutchinsonkatherine seasonalityoftheagulhascurrentwithrespecttonearandfarfieldwinds