Seasonal and Interannual Salinity Variability on the Northeast U.S.
Continental Shelf: Insights from Satellite Sea Surface Salinity and
Implications for Stratification
Abstract
The Northeast U.S. continental shelf is a highly productive and
economically important region that has undergone substantial changes in
recent years. Warming exceeds the global average and several episodes of
anomalously warm, sustained temperatures, so called marine heatwaves,
have had profound impacts on regional fisheries. A majority of recent
research focused on the analysis of temperature, however salinity can
serve as a valuable tracer as well.
With now more than a decade of remote-sensing sea surface salinity data,
we shed new light onto salinity variability in the region with focus on
the Mid-Atlantic Bight and assess its role for modulating stratification
on the shelf using historic hydrographic data. Seasonal freshwater input
via local river discharge drives decreasing salinities in spring and
summer on the shelf, but also in the Slope Sea. In spring, freshwater
aids the build up of stratification and a freshwater lens of about 20m
thickness extends to the shelf break above the pycnocline by the
beginning of summer. An observed strong salinification in the fall is
linked to offshore forcing over the slope associated with the presence
of Warm Core Rings.
Coherent low-frequency salinity variability is found over the slope and
shelf, highlighting that shelf conditions are significantly impacted by
local offshore variability and vice versa. 2015 was characterized by
anomalously high salinities, associated with a northerly position of the
Gulf Stream. A freshening between 2015 and 2021, is in agreement with
increased river discharge. Overall, salinity serves as a valuable
additional tracer of these multi-variate processes.