Abstract
The Congolese upwelling system (CUS), located along the West African
coast north of the Congo
River, is one of the most productive and least studied systems in the
Gulf of Guinea. The Sea Surface
Temperature minimum in the CUS occurs in austral winter, when the winds
are weak and not
particularly favorable to coastal upwelling. Here, for the first time,
we use a high-resolution regional
ocean model to identify the key atmospheric and oceanic processes that
control the seasonal evolution
of the mixed-layer temperature in a 1°-wide coastal band from 6°S to
4°S. The model is in good
agreement with observations on seasonal timescales, and in particular
reproduces the signature of the
surface upwelling during the austral winter, the shallow mixed-layer due
to salinity stratification, and
the signature of coastal wave propagation. The analysis of the
mixed-layer heat budget reveals a
competition between warming by air-sea fluxes, dominated by the solar
flux throughout the year, and
cooling by vertical mixing at the base of the mixed-layer, as other
tendency terms remain weak. The
seasonal cooling is induced by vertical mixing, but is not controlled by
the local wind. A subsurface
analysis shows that remotely-forced coastal trapped waves raise the
thermocline from April to
August, which strengthens the vertical temperature gradient at the base
of the mixed-layer and leads
to the mixing-induced seasonal cooling in the Congolese upwelling
system.