Increasing ocean stratification over the past half-century
Nature Climate Change 10(12): 1116-1123
Article 2020 English
Authors
GL
Guancheng Li
LC
Lijing Cheng
JZ
Jiang Zhu
Abstract
1 min read
Seawater generally forms stratified layers with lighter waters near the surface and denser waters at greater depth. This stable configuration acts as a barrier to water mixing that impacts the efficiency of vertical exchanges of heat, carbon, oxygen and other constituents. Previous quantification of stratification change has been limited to simple differencing of surface and 200-m depth changes and has neglected the spatial complexity of ocean density change. Here, we quantify changes in ocean stratification down to depths of 2,000 m using the squared buoyancy frequency N2 and newly available ocean temperature/salinity observations. We find that stratification globally has increased by a substantial 5.3% [5.0%, 5.8%] in recent decades (1960–2018) (the confidence interval is 5–95%); a rate of 0.90% per decade. Most of the increase (~71%) occurred in the upper 200 m of the ocean and resulted largely (>90%) from temperature changes, although salinity changes play an important role locally. Seawater properties—temperature, salinity and density—cause stratification of the water column, limiting vertical exchange. Considering down to 2,000 m, ocean stratification is shown to have increased ~5.3% since 1960, with ~71% of the change occurring in the upper 200 m primarily from warming.
Lijing Cheng, Karina von Schuckmann, John Abraham, Kevin E Trenberth, Michael Mann, Laure Zanna, Matthew H. England, Jan D. Zika, John Fasullo, Yongqiang Yu, Yuying Pan, Jiang Zhu, Emily R. Newsom, Ben Bronselaer, Xiaopei Lin
Yuying Pan, Lijing Cheng, Karina von Schuckmann, Kevin E Trenberth, Guancheng Li, John Abraham, Yuanxin Liu, Viktor Gouretski, Yongqiang Yu, Hailong Liu, Chunlei Liu
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