Dependence of horizontal characteristic scale of chlorophyll a
distribution on eddy activity at the mid-latitudes of global oceans
Abstract
Understanding of the spatial distribution of near-surface oceanic
chlorophyll a (Chl-a) in relation to eddy activity is important because
Chl-a is critical to biological production and carbon absorption, and
its distribution is closely related to meso-scale eddies and Rossby
waves. Chl-a distributions based on satellite observations from 2001 to
2018 were analyzed in association with eddy activity in mid-latitude
regions of the five ocean basins (North/South Pacific, North/South
Atlantic, and South Indian oceans) and related to physical eddy scales
including the internal Rossby deformation radius (LD) and Rhines scale
(LR). In the open ocean, the horizontal scale of Chl-a (D) decreased
with increasing eddy kinetic energy (EKE), converging to πLD in the
high-eddy-activity region. The ratio of zonal (Dz) to meridional (Dm)
scales, RD (= Dz/Dm), converged to 1 with increasing EKE, implying
isotropic uniformization with meso-scale eddies. In regions of low EKE
(especially the central subtropical and eastern parts of each basin), Dm
was larger than LD, with a scale similar to πLR. In these regions, Dz
values greater than Dm were found (with scales of 500–1000 km),
indicating the effects of planetary phenomena on Chl-a. In such regions
the sensitivity of D to EKE tended to be higher than in western boundary
regions, indicating the influence of meso-scale eddy activity on the
Chl-a distribution, even with low EKE.