Abstract

Inconsistent global/basin ocean heat content (OHC) changes were found in different ocean subsurface temperature analyses, especially in recent studies related to the slowdown in global surface temperature rise. This finding challenges the reliability of the ocean subsurface temperature analyses and motivates a more comprehensive inter-comparison between the analyses. Here we compare the OHC changes in three ocean analyses (Ishii, EN4 and IAP) to investigate the uncertainty in OHC in four major ocean basins from decadal to multi-decadal scales. First, all products show an increase of OHC since 1970 in each ocean basin revealing a robust warming, although the warming rates are not identical. The geographical patterns, the key modes and the vertical structure of OHC changes are consistent among the three datasets, implying that the main OHC variabilities can be robustly represented. However, large discrepancies are found in the percentage of basinal ocean heating related to the global ocean, with the largest differences in the Pacific and Southern Ocean. Meanwhile, we find a large discrepancy of ocean heat storage in different layers, especially within 300–700 m in the Pacific and Southern Oceans. Furthermore, the near surface analysis of Ishii and IAP are consistent with sea surface temperature (SST) products, but EN4 is found to underestimate the long-term trend. Compared with ocean heat storage derived from the atmospheric budget equation, all products show consistent seasonal cycles of OHC in the upper 1500 m especially during 2008 to 2012. Overall, our analyses further the understanding of the observed OHC variations, and we recommend a careful quantification of errors in the ocean analyses.

Highlights

  • An understanding of global and regional ocean heat content (OHC) change is essential to understand both past and future climate change

  • Global and regional OHC changes based on the three products are shown (Sect. 3.1)

  • To examine the decadal variations, we focus on two periods: 1983–1998 and 1998–2012, the latter is typically referred as the slowdown period in the literature

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An understanding of global and regional ocean heat content (OHC) change is essential to understand both past and future climate change. We investigate the basin-scale OHC changes on decadal scales by using three different ocean analyses, providing both the consensus and the discrepancies among the three datasets. We use two independent datasets—sea surface temperature (SST), and net radiative flux at the top of atmosphere (TOA) from satellite observations to validate the ocean analyses This manuscript is constructed as follows: an introduction of the datasets and methods is presented in Sect. 3. In this study, we will compare the global and basin-scale OHC changes by using three different objectively analyzed ocean datasets (Ishii et al 2003; Good et al 2013; Cheng and Zhu 2016).

Gridded temperature datasets
Sea surface temperature datasets
Method
Heat flux datasets
Results
Time evolution of OHC
Geographical pattern of long‐term OHC changes
OHC changes in different ocean layers
Comparison with independent datasets
Seasonal cycle of OHC
Geographical pattern of uncertainty and its possible link with data count
Discussions and summary
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call