Abstract

The objective of the present study is to analyze the interannual variability of the Southwestern Atlantic Continental Shelf (SWACS) circulation and its thermohaline structure. To accomplish it we employed the global ocean reanalysis ORAP5.0, which spans the 35-years period 1979–2013. ORAP5.0 satisfactorily reproduces the most distinctive features of the SWACS circulation and its variability on different timescales, including the interannual scale. The first mode of a joint empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis of sea surface temperature (SST), sea surface salinity (SSS), and vertically averaged horizontal velocities is significantly correlated with the first mode of interannual variability of the atmosphere in the Southern Hemisphere, the Southern Annular Mode (SAM). Remarkably, the shelf sea response has been found to be statistically significant not only in the Patagonian Shelf (south of 40 °S), as discussed in the literature, but also in the Northern Shelf (north of 40°S). During the active phases of the leading mode, current anomalies develop as a result of the sea surface height adjustment to Ekman transport at the coastline induced by alongshore wind anomalies. Modification of the advection terms in the salinity and heat budgets due to changes in the circulation and heat surface fluxes generate SST and SSS anomalies along the SWACS. It is suggested that these anomalies drive changes in the mixed layer depth and that these changes can modulate the interannual variability of the chlorophyll-a concentration during austral spring in the frontal zones.

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