OS23A-1988
Mesoscale Activity and Nitrogen-loss in the Oxygen Minimum Zone of the Eastern Tropical Pacific During ENSO Conditions

Tuesday, 15 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Ivonne Montes1, Boris Dewitte2, Elodie Gutknecht2, Aurélien Paulmier2, Isabelle Dadou3, Andreas Oschlies4 and Véronique Camille Garçon5, (1)Instituto Geofísico del Perú, Lima, Peru, (2)LEGOS/IRD, SYSCO2, TOULOUSE, France, (3)LEGOS, Toulouse Cedex 9, France, (4)GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Kiel, Germany, (5)CNRS-LEGOS, Toulouse, France
Abstract:
The Eastern Tropical South Pacific encompasses one of the most extended Oxygen Minimum zones, which is mainly maintained by a combination of sluggish circulation and high biological productivity in the surface layer leading to elevate organic matter decomposition consuming dissolved oxygen. Low-oxygen areas are important not only for macroorganisms that cannot survive in oxygen-poor conditions, but also because of special biogeochemical processes occurring at low oxygen concentrations. In particular, a large fraction of oceanic nitrogen-loss occurs in these areas via anaerobic microbial processes. These include denitrification and axammox that both lead to a net loss of fixed nitrogen once oxygen concentrations have fallen below some threshold of a few umol/l. Recently it has been found that eddies may act as nitrogen-loss hotspots, possibly by shielding enclosed water parcels from lateral mixing with better ventilated oxygen-richer waters outside the eddies. Here we used a regional coupled biogeochemical model to investigate the relationship between eddies and the nitrogen-loss. We also investigate the mechanisms responsible for the generation of eddies and for possible modulations of eddy activity on interannual timescales, in particular during cold and warm phases of the El Nino Southern Oscillation.