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  • GBV  (2)
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  • 1
    UID:
    (DE-627)091252458
    Format: 20
    ISSN: 2169-9275
    Content: Rez.: We investigate the seasonal sea surface height (SSH) variability on large spatial scales in the North Atlantic by using both a numerical simulation and in situ data. First, an ocean general circulation model is run with daily forcing from the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts reanalysis. We evaluate the different contributions to the seasonal SSH variability resulting from the surface heat fluxes, advection, salt content variability, deep ocean steric changes, and bottom pressure variability. These terms are compared with estimates from in situ data. North of 20 degree N, there is an approximate balance between h sub(Q), the air-sea heat flux induced changes in steric height, and SSH variability. The next important component is the advection (its contribution to the annual amplitude is of the order of 1 cm except near the western boundary); other contributions are found to be smaller. Between 10 degree N and 10 degree S the advection variability induced by the seasonal wind stress cycle is the primary source of SSH variability. We then compare the sea surface height annual harmonic from TOPEX/Poseidon altimetry with the steric effect from the heat flux and with model and/or in situ estimates of the other terms. In many areas north of 20 degree N the balance between h sub(Q) and the altimetric SSH seasonal cycle is closed within the uncertainty limit of each of the terms of the SSH budget. However, h sub(Q) and the SSH do not balance each other in the eastern North Atlantic, and the results are sensitive to the choice of the heat flux product, suggesting that significant errors, typically 20-40 W m super(-2) for the seasonal cycle amplitude, are present in the meteorological model heat fluxes.
    In: Journal of geophysical research / C, Washington, DC : Union, 1978, 105(2000), 3, Seite 6307-6326, 2169-9275
    In: volume:105
    In: year:2000
    In: number:3
    In: pages:6307-6326
    In: extent:20
    Language: English
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  • 2
    UID:
    (DE-627)1810365457
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (35 p)
    Content: The Mediterranean Sea is recognized as one of the most polluted areas by floating plastics. During the Tara Mediterranean expedition, an extensive sampling of plastic debris was carried out in seven ecoregions, from Gibraltar to Lebanon. The abundance, size, surface, circularity and mass of 75,030 pieces were analyzed and classified in a standardized multi-parameter database. Their average abundance was 2.60 x 10 5 items km-2 (2.25 x 10 3 to 8.50 x 10 6 km -2 ) resulting in an estimate of about 650 billion plastic particles floating on the surface of the Mediterranean. This corresponds to an average of 660 metric tons of plastic, at the lower end of literature estimates. High concentrations of plastic were observed in the northwestern coastal regions, north of the Tyrrhenian Sea, but also off the western and central Mediterranean basins. The Levantine basin south of Cyprus had the lowest concentrations. A Lagrangian Plastic Pollution Index (LPPI) predicting the concentration of plastic debris was validated using the spatial resolution of the data. The advanced state of plastic degradation detected in the analyses supports the hypothesis that stranding/fragmentation/resuspension is a key process in the dynamics of floating plastic in the Mediterranean surface waters. This hypothesis is supported by the significant correlation between pollution sources and areas of high plastic concentration obtained by the LPPI
    Language: English
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