Dispersion of surface drifters in the Tropical Atlantic
| Authors |
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|---|---|
| Publication date | 01-2021 |
| Journal | Frontiers in Marine Science |
| Article number | 607426 |
| Volume | Issue number | 7 |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
The Tropical Atlantic Ocean has recently been the source of enormous amounts of floating Sargassum
macroalgae that have started to inundate shorelines in the Caribbean,
the western coast of Africa and northern Brazil. It is still unclear,
however, how the surface currents carry the Sargassum, largely
restricted to the upper meter of the ocean, and whether observed surface
drifter trajectories and hydrodynamical ocean models can be used to
simulate its pathways. Here, we analyze a dataset of two types of
surface drifters (38 in total), purposely deployed in the Tropical
Atlantic Ocean in July, 2019. Twenty of the surface drifters were
undrogued and reached only ∼8 cm into the water, while the other 18 were
standard Surface Velocity Program (SVP) drifters that all had a drogue
centered around 15 m depth. We show that the undrogued drifters separate
more slowly than the drogued SVP drifters, likely because of the
suppressed turbulence due to convergence in wind rows, which was
stronger right at the surface than at 15 m depth. Undrogued drifters
were also more likely to enter the Caribbean Sea. We also show that the
novel Surface and Merged Ocean Currents (SMOC) product from the
Copernicus Marine Environmental Service (CMEMS) does not clearly
simulate one type of drifter better than the other, highlighting the
need for further improvements in assimilated hydrodynamic models in the
region, for a better understanding and forecasting of Sargassum drift in the Tropical Atlantic.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary material. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2020.607426 |
| Downloads |
fmars-07-607426
(Final published version)
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| Supplementary materials | |
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