Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, Philippines

The Bohol Sea is a relatively unstudied marginal sea located in the southern part of the Philippines. Hydrographic data from the Philippines Experiment (PhilEx) cruises reveal a complex three-dimensional circulation composed of two overturning cells that may be referred to as “double-estuarine type....

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Main Authors: Olivia C. Cabrera, Cesar L. Villanoy, Laura T. David, Arnold L. Gordon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Oceanography Society 2011-03-01
Series:Oceanography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tos.org/oceanography/articles/24-1_cabrera.pdf
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spelling doaj-71fa6f39ccf4498c881c100d035201e42020-11-25T03:24:53ZengThe Oceanography SocietyOceanography1042-82752011-03-01241130141Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, PhilippinesOlivia C. CabreraCesar L. VillanoyLaura T. DavidArnold L. GordonThe Bohol Sea is a relatively unstudied marginal sea located in the southern part of the Philippines. Hydrographic data from the Philippines Experiment (PhilEx) cruises reveal a complex three-dimensional circulation composed of two overturning cells that may be referred to as “double-estuarine type.” This type of overturning circulation promotes upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich waters within the Bohol Sea associated with entrainment and eddy processes that promote phytoplankton blooms. Evidence from ocean color imagery supports entrainment in the eastern basin and eddy formation in the southwestern basin. However, PhilEx researchers found that the cyclonic Iligan Bay Eddy in the southwestern basin did not conform to the paradigm of cyclonic eddy upwelling. Although upwelling was evident through doming isotherms within the water column, the surface projection of this signal was suppressed by the presence of a thick barrier layer, particularly during cruises in December 2007 and January 2008, a known La Niña period. Long-term trends in chlorophyll data followed trends in rainfall and the ENSO 3.4 index, with elevated (reduced) chlorophyll during dry El Niño years (wet La Niña years). By promoting stability of surface layer stratification and preventing vertical transport of nutrients, the barrier layer is thus a mechanism by which the El Niño-Southern Oscillation influences phytoplankton biomass in the Bohol Sea.http://tos.org/oceanography/articles/24-1_cabrera.pdfPhilippine ArchipelagoPhilExBohol Seadouble-estuarine type circulationcyclonic eddy upwelling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olivia C. Cabrera
Cesar L. Villanoy
Laura T. David
Arnold L. Gordon
spellingShingle Olivia C. Cabrera
Cesar L. Villanoy
Laura T. David
Arnold L. Gordon
Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, Philippines
Oceanography
Philippine Archipelago
PhilEx
Bohol Sea
double-estuarine type circulation
cyclonic eddy upwelling
author_facet Olivia C. Cabrera
Cesar L. Villanoy
Laura T. David
Arnold L. Gordon
author_sort Olivia C. Cabrera
title Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, Philippines
title_short Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, Philippines
title_full Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, Philippines
title_fullStr Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Barrier Layer Control of Entrainment and Upwelling in the Bohol Sea, Philippines
title_sort barrier layer control of entrainment and upwelling in the bohol sea, philippines
publisher The Oceanography Society
series Oceanography
issn 1042-8275
publishDate 2011-03-01
description The Bohol Sea is a relatively unstudied marginal sea located in the southern part of the Philippines. Hydrographic data from the Philippines Experiment (PhilEx) cruises reveal a complex three-dimensional circulation composed of two overturning cells that may be referred to as “double-estuarine type.” This type of overturning circulation promotes upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich waters within the Bohol Sea associated with entrainment and eddy processes that promote phytoplankton blooms. Evidence from ocean color imagery supports entrainment in the eastern basin and eddy formation in the southwestern basin. However, PhilEx researchers found that the cyclonic Iligan Bay Eddy in the southwestern basin did not conform to the paradigm of cyclonic eddy upwelling. Although upwelling was evident through doming isotherms within the water column, the surface projection of this signal was suppressed by the presence of a thick barrier layer, particularly during cruises in December 2007 and January 2008, a known La Niña period. Long-term trends in chlorophyll data followed trends in rainfall and the ENSO 3.4 index, with elevated (reduced) chlorophyll during dry El Niño years (wet La Niña years). By promoting stability of surface layer stratification and preventing vertical transport of nutrients, the barrier layer is thus a mechanism by which the El Niño-Southern Oscillation influences phytoplankton biomass in the Bohol Sea.
topic Philippine Archipelago
PhilEx
Bohol Sea
double-estuarine type circulation
cyclonic eddy upwelling
url http://tos.org/oceanography/articles/24-1_cabrera.pdf
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