The role of salinity in the decadal variability of the North Atlantic meridional overturning circulation
The role of salinity in the decadal variability of the North Atlantic meridional overturning circulation
Date
2008-12
Authors
Frankignoul, Claude
Deshayes, Julie
Curry, Ruth G.
Deshayes, Julie
Curry, Ruth G.
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Abstract
An OGCM hindcast is used to investigate the linkages between North Atlantic Ocean
salinity and circulation changes during 1963–2003. The focus is on the eastern subpolar
region consisting of the Irminger Sea and the eastern North Atlantic where a careful
assessment shows that the simulated interannual to decadal salinity changes in the upper
1500 m reproduce well those derived from the available record of hydrographic
measurements. In the model, the variability of the Atlantic meridional overturning
circulation (MOC) is primarily driven by changes in deep water formation taking place in
the Irminger Sea and, to a lesser extent, the Labrador Sea. Both are strongly influenced by
the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). The modeled interannual to decadal salinity changes
in the subpolar basins are mostly controlled by circulation-driven anomalies of freshwater
flux convergence, although surface salinity restoring to climatology and other boundary
fluxes each account for approximately 25% of the variance. The NAO plays an important
role: a positive NAO phase is associated with increased precipitation, reduced northward
salt transport by the wind-driven intergyre gyre, and increased southward flows of
freshwater across the Greenland-Scotland ridge. Since the NAO largely controlled deep
convection in the subpolar gyre, fresher waters are found near the sinking region during
convective events. This markedly differs from the active influence on the MOC that salinity
exerts at decadal and longer timescales in most coupled models. The intensification of the
MOC that follows a positive NAO phase by about 2 years does not lead to an increase in
the northward salt transport into the subpolar domain at low frequencies because it is
cancelled by the concomitant intensification of the subpolar gyre which shifts the subpolar
front eastward and reduces the northward salt transport by the North Atlantic Current
waters. This differs again from most coupled models, where the gyre intensification
precedes that of the MOC by several years.
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Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Climate Dynamics 33 (2009): 777-793, doi:10.1007/s00382-008-0523-2.