Ventilation revealed by the observation of dissolved oxygen concentration south of the Kuroshio Extension during 2012–2013

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Abstract

From the moored buoy observation at 33. 9 ∘N, 144. 9 ∘E south of the Kuroshio Extension (KE), we obtained Eulerian time series of dissolved oxygen concentration (DO) at 200, 400, and 600 m depths from June 2012 to March 2013. We observed ventilation by meso- and submesoscale processes that transport water southward across the KE jet. First, the cyclonic mesoscale eddy in June 2012 substantially depressed DO at depths of 400 and 600 m but maintained DO at 200 m, suggesting near-surface lateral transport of high-DO water derived from the north of the KE. Second, subduction of high-DO (>230 μ mol kg- 1) water to a depth of 600 m was observed from early February to March 2013, associated with a mesoscale/submesoscale meandering of the KE jet. In mid-March 2013, shipboard hydrographic data were collected where the water mass at the mooring site would be advected by the eastward current on the southern flank of the KE. Based on these data, the subduction event was identified as an intrusion of an anomalously thick water mass from approximately 400–900 dbar. Ventilation of the subtropical mode water at a depth of 200 m around a subsurface DO maximum layer was detected as a rapid rise in DO in January 2013. This occurred after a significant seasonal decrease in DO at a rate of - 0.130 ± 0.007 μ mol kg- 1 day- 1 from July to December 2012.

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Nagano, A., Suga, T., Kawai, Y., Wakita, M., Uehara, K., & Taniguchi, K. (2016). Ventilation revealed by the observation of dissolved oxygen concentration south of the Kuroshio Extension during 2012–2013. Journal of Oceanography, 72(6), 837–850. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10872-016-0386-9

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