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A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015

Prediction and Research Moored Array in the Tropical Atlantic (PIRATA) records in combination with outputs from an Ocean Linear Model (OLM) and altimetric data are used to investigate the link between the equatorial Atlantic Ocean dynamics and the variability in the coastal region of Angola-Namibia...

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Main Author: Imbol, Koungue Rodrigue Anicet
Other Authors: Rouault, Mathieu
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Oceanography 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Imbol, Koungue Rodrigue Anicet
author2 Rouault, Mathieu
author_browse Imbol, Koungue Rodrigue Anicet
Rouault, Mathieu
author_facet Rouault, Mathieu
Imbol, Koungue Rodrigue Anicet
author_sort Imbol, Koungue Rodrigue Anicet
collection Thesis
description Prediction and Research Moored Array in the Tropical Atlantic (PIRATA) records in combination with outputs from an Ocean Linear Model (OLM) and altimetric data are used to investigate the link between the equatorial Atlantic Ocean dynamics and the variability in the coastal region of Angola-Namibia at interannual timescales over 1998 to 2012. The PIRATA records help to define an index of equatorial Kelvin wave activities in the Equatorial Atlantic. There is a good agreement between PIRATA monthly dynamic height anomalies, altimetric monthly sea surface height anomalies (SSHA), and sea level anomalies calculated with an OLM at interannual time scales. This allows the interpretation of PIRATA records in terms of equatorial Kelvin wave propagations. Extreme warm or cold events in the Angola – Namibia area lag strong anomalous eastward equatorial propagations by 1–2 months. Remote equatorial forcing via equatorial Kelvin waves which propagate poleward along the west African coast as coastal trapped waves is at the origin of their developments. Results show a seasonal phasing, with significantly higher correlations between the equatorial index and coastal sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA) off Angola-Namibia in October - April season. Then, a systematic study of all the Benguela Niño and Benguela Niña events before 1982 is done using an Ocean general circulation model in combination with the OLM outputs from 1958 to 2015. 26 anomalous strong coastal events (16 warm and 10 cold) are identified. The analysis of their evolution confirms the remote equatorial origin of most of these coastal anomalous strong events. Modelled meridional transport anomalies across the Angola Benguela Front (ABF) contribute to the development of these anomalous coastal warm events. Across the ABF, the results obtain with the net temperature transport are similar to the ones with net mass transport. Most anomalous events peak in October - April season. Lagged composites of surface temperature and wind stress anomalies in the equatorial and southeastern Atlantic reveal that both local and remote forcings develop simultaneously 1-2 months before the peak of Benguela Niño or Niña. At the monthly scale, local atmospheric forcing is more correlated with anomalous coastal events occurring in Southern Angola which is a non-wind-upwelling driven region. The results from this thesis open the possibility to predict Benguela Niño and Benguela Niña events using an index depicting the equatorial interannual variability associated with Interannual Equatorial Kelvin Wave propagation, especially from October to April when the coastal stratification is favourable to the imprint of coastal trapped waves in the surface layer.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:54.720Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Oceanography
publisherStr Department of Oceanography
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29288 A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015 Imbol, Koungue Rodrigue Anicet Rouault, Mathieu Illig, Serena Oceanography Prediction and Research Moored Array in the Tropical Atlantic (PIRATA) records in combination with outputs from an Ocean Linear Model (OLM) and altimetric data are used to investigate the link between the equatorial Atlantic Ocean dynamics and the variability in the coastal region of Angola-Namibia at interannual timescales over 1998 to 2012. The PIRATA records help to define an index of equatorial Kelvin wave activities in the Equatorial Atlantic. There is a good agreement between PIRATA monthly dynamic height anomalies, altimetric monthly sea surface height anomalies (SSHA), and sea level anomalies calculated with an OLM at interannual time scales. This allows the interpretation of PIRATA records in terms of equatorial Kelvin wave propagations. Extreme warm or cold events in the Angola – Namibia area lag strong anomalous eastward equatorial propagations by 1–2 months. Remote equatorial forcing via equatorial Kelvin waves which propagate poleward along the west African coast as coastal trapped waves is at the origin of their developments. Results show a seasonal phasing, with significantly higher correlations between the equatorial index and coastal sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA) off Angola-Namibia in October - April season. Then, a systematic study of all the Benguela Niño and Benguela Niña events before 1982 is done using an Ocean general circulation model in combination with the OLM outputs from 1958 to 2015. 26 anomalous strong coastal events (16 warm and 10 cold) are identified. The analysis of their evolution confirms the remote equatorial origin of most of these coastal anomalous strong events. Modelled meridional transport anomalies across the Angola Benguela Front (ABF) contribute to the development of these anomalous coastal warm events. Across the ABF, the results obtain with the net temperature transport are similar to the ones with net mass transport. Most anomalous events peak in October - April season. Lagged composites of surface temperature and wind stress anomalies in the equatorial and southeastern Atlantic reveal that both local and remote forcings develop simultaneously 1-2 months before the peak of Benguela Niño or Niña. At the monthly scale, local atmospheric forcing is more correlated with anomalous coastal events occurring in Southern Angola which is a non-wind-upwelling driven region. The results from this thesis open the possibility to predict Benguela Niño and Benguela Niña events using an index depicting the equatorial interannual variability associated with Interannual Equatorial Kelvin Wave propagation, especially from October to April when the coastal stratification is favourable to the imprint of coastal trapped waves in the surface layer. 2019-02-05T06:52:41Z 2019-02-05T06:52:41Z 2018 2019-01-31T11:16:16Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29288 eng application/pdf Department of Oceanography Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Oceanography
Imbol, Koungue Rodrigue Anicet
A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015
title_full A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015
title_fullStr A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015
title_full_unstemmed A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015
title_short A study of Benguela Niños and Niñas from 1958 to 2015
title_sort study of benguela ninos and ninas from 1958 to 2015
topic Oceanography
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29288
work_keys_str_mv AT imbolkounguerodrigueanicet astudyofbenguelaninosandninasfrom1958to2015
AT imbolkounguerodrigueanicet studyofbenguelaninosandninasfrom1958to2015