Chlorophyll Rings around Ocean Eddies in the North Pacific

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Abstract

Chlorophyll rings (CRs) are defined as elevated chlorophyll along eddy peripheries and have been observed in anticyclonic oceanic eddies occasionally. This study presents observations of CRs around both anticyclonic and cyclonic eddies from a large observational data set. An innovative algorithm is developed to identify CRs from satellite observations of sea level anomalies and near-surface chlorophyll concentration in the North Pacific Ocean between 2003 and 2010. The results show that only 1% of mesoscale eddies are associated with CRs, which implies the CRs are not ubiquitous. We propose two potential generation mechanisms for CRs: horizontal advection and wind-current interaction. The former dominates the formation of about two-thirds of the CRs. The CRs associated with both cyclones and anticyclones represents an important contribution to better understanding of mesoscale physical/biological coupled phenomena.

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Xu, G., Dong, C., Liu, Y., Gaube, P., & Yang, J. (2019). Chlorophyll Rings around Ocean Eddies in the North Pacific. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-38457-8

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