info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Relationship between sea surface temperature anomalies in the Southwestern Atlantic Continental Shelf and atmospheric variability on intraseasonal timescales
Fecha
2022-09Registro en:
Luz Clara Tejedor, Moira; Alvarez, Mariano Sebastián; Vera, Carolina Susana; Simionato, Claudia Gloria; Jaureguizar, Andrés Javier; Relationship between sea surface temperature anomalies in the Southwestern Atlantic Continental Shelf and atmospheric variability on intraseasonal timescales; Springer-v D I Verlag Gmbh; Climate Dynamics; 59; 5-6; 9-2022; 1539-1554
0930-7575
1432-0894
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Luz Clara Tejedor, Moira
Alvarez, Mariano Sebastián
Vera, Carolina Susana
Simionato, Claudia Gloria
Jaureguizar, Andrés Javier
Resumen
The intraseasonal (IS) variability of the sea surface temperature (SST) in the Southwestern Atlantic Continental Shelf (SWACS, 45–33° S—70–50° W), and its relationship with that in the atmosphere, was studied for the austral warm season. SST satellite data (11-km resolution NOAA CoastWatch Program) and data of different atmospheric variables (Reanalysis1 NCEP/NCAR and ERA-Interim) were used. Data were filtered using a 10–90 day filter to isolate the IS variability. A Principal Component analysis was applied then to the filtered SST anomalies (SSTA) and the activity of the leading modes was described through the corresponding temporal series. The first three modes are significant. EOF1 (25.7% of variance) exhibits SSTA of opposite sign to the north/south of 42° S. EOF2 (9.0%) and EOF3 (5.1%) are related with centers of SSTA of opposite sign located off the Uruguayan coast and in the middle shelf. Composites of SSTA and of key atmospheric variables were made considering the days in which the main modes were active. They show that the SSTA described by the three modes are associated with distinctive regional sea level pressure anomalies that, in turn, seem to be related to atmospheric Rossby wave trains extending from the Australia area towards South America. The corresponding atmospheric wave sources vary depending on the mode. These results show, therefore, that the SSTA in the SWACS exhibit significant IS variability that is, in part, locally and remotely influenced by atmospheric anomalies oscillating on similar timescales. These ocean–atmosphere teleconnections could help to improve ocean predictability at those timescales in the future.