Title
Indian Ocean marine biogeochemical variability and its feedback on simulated South Asia climate
Date Issued
13 April 2022
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Sein D.V.
Dvornikov A.Y.
Martyanov S.D.
Cabos W.
Ryabchenko V.A.
Gröger M.
Jacob D.
Kumar Mishra A.
Kumar P.
Publisher(s)
Copernicus GmbH
Abstract
We investigate the effect of variable marine biogeochemical light absorption on Indian Ocean sea surface temperature (SST) and how this affects the South Asian climate. In twin experiments with a regional Earth system model, we found that the average SST is lower over most of the domain when variable marine biogeochemical light absorption is taken into account, compared to the reference experiment with a constant light attenuation coefficient equal to 0.06gm-1. The most significant deviations (more than 1gg C) in SST are observed in the monsoon season. A considerable cooling of subsurface layers occurs, and the thermocline shifts upward in the experiment with the activated biogeochemical impact. Also, the phytoplankton primary production becomes higher, especially during periods of winter and summer phytoplankton blooms. The effect of altered SST variability on climate was investigated by coupling the ocean models to a regional atmosphere model. We find the largest effects on the amount of precipitation, particularly during the monsoon season. In the Arabian Sea, the reduction of the transport of humidity across the Equator leads to a reduction of the large-scale precipitation in the eastern part of the basin, reinforcing the reduction of the convective precipitation. In the Bay of Bengal, it increases the large-scale precipitation, countering convective precipitation decline. Thus, the key impacts of including the full biogeochemical coupling with corresponding light attenuation, which in turn depends on variable chlorophyll a concentration, include the enhanced phytoplankton primary production, a shallower thermocline, and decreased SST and water temperature in subsurface layers, with cascading effects upon the model ocean physics which further translates into altered atmosphere dynamics.
Start page
809
End page
831
Volume
13
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Investigación climática
Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85129099075
Source
Earth System Dynamics
ISSN of the container
21904979
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgements. This work is jointly funded by Russian Science Foundation (RSF), Russia (project 19-47-02015), and Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India (grant no. DST/INT/RUS/RSF/P-33/G), through a project “Impact of climate change on South Asia extremes: A high-resolution regional Earth System Model assessment”. The research was performed in the framework of the state assignment of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Russia (no. 0128-2021-0014). This work used resources of the Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum (DKRZ) granted by its Scientific Steering Committee (WLA) under project ID ba1144. We thank the anonymous reviewers and Andreas Oschlies for the constructive suggestions and critical remarks, which helped to improve the paper.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus