Transient wind-driven coastal upwelling on a shelf with varying width and orientation

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Abstract

Cross-correlations between along-shelf wind stress and both along- and cross-shelf currents within the central Bay of Plenty, New Zealand show the circulation during spring-summer to be highly responsive to wind events. Current meter records indicate that upwelling-favourable wind stresses generate upwelling dynamics in both mean and fluctuating senses. Both thermistor moorings and satellite inferred temperature data record the outcropping of this cool water following upwelling-favourable wind stresses. The upwelling circulation provides an efficient mechanism for the periodic delivery of cool (c. <15°C), nutrient rich (NOx-N >80 μg litre-1) water to the coastal zone during spring. Historical wind forcing data suggest that the wind-forced dynamics described were responsible for a major toxic algal bloom within the Bay of Plenty during 1992–93. © 2008, Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Longdill, P. C., Healy, T. R., & Black, K. P. (2008). Transient wind-driven coastal upwelling on a shelf with varying width and orientation. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 42(2), 181–196. https://doi.org/10.1080/00288330809509947

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