SSTs: Difference between revisions

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[[SSTFlooding|The Potential Link Between Sea Surface Temperatures and Flooding]]
[[SSTFlooding|The Potential Link Between Sea Surface Temperatures and Flooding]]
What are High SSTs?
• Historically what has been the temperature
• How has it increased/ trends in warming?
o (from epa.gov/climatechange) “sea surface temperature increased over the 20th century and continues to rise. From 1901 through 2012, temps rose at an average rate of .13 degrees F per decade.
o “have been higher during the past three decades than at any other time since observations began.”
o “increases in sst have largely occurred over two key periods: between 1910 and 1940 and from about 1960 to the present. SST appear to have cooled between 1880 and 1910”
o
What are causes of SSTs?
• Anthropogenic
• Earth’s oceans are warming as a direct result of increased concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that increase air temperatures.
• Natural
• “Oceans have the ability to release or attain heat from the atmosphere and this exchange of heat is a driving force of atmospheric circulation. Evaporation rates are expected to increase with climate change, resulting in increases in atmospheric water vapor. Water vapor is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide; thus, increased water vapor concentrations contribute to greater downward longwave radiation fluxes that increase the amount of heat retained in the atmosphere.
• •      Cycle of increased water vapor to stimulate increased global warming and thus continued production of water vapor, leading to a “runaway greenhouse effect”
• •      Water vapor clouds at high altitudes absorb and re-radiate long-wave radiation, which causes warming by augmenting the greenhouse effect, but low altitude clouds reflect incoming solar radiation which leads to cooling
• •      Do not know which effect will have greatest impact, but evidence suggests it will lead to an increase in warming which will cause upper ocean temperatures to increase at a faster rate
• “Dominant atmospheric factors driving ocean temperature include wind speed, air temperature, cloudiness, and humidity; dominant oceanic factors include heat transport by currents and vertical mixing. Fluctuations in sea surface temperatures vary with the seasons.” (11)
• Feedback loops
• •      Relationship between ocean-atmosphere heat exchanges and global weather and climate patterns
• •      “In the case of thermal expansion, given an equal mass, the total volume of ocean waters decrease when ocean temperatures drop and expand when temperatures increase” 12
• •      Positive Feedback: warming of sea surface temperatures à increased ice melting and evaporation à increased humidity creates more intense storms à more extreme precipitation and wind events. Some areas because of increased evaporation will experience intense surface drying increasing the risk of flooding when intense storms occur.
Effects of SSTs on Coral?
• Coral Bleaching
• Increase in Severity of Storms
• http://water.usgs.gov/nrp/proj.bib/Publications/2008/mccabe_wolock_2008.pdf
o Increase flooding of Nutrients
 Effects on Coral reef
o Increase in Sediment Overload
 Effects on Coral Reef
Recovery/Treatment Options
• Can High SSTs be reversed
• Can effects on Coral be mitigated
Sources
• Russ and McCook. 1999, Potential effects of a cyclone on benthic algae production and yield to grazers on the great barrier reef. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology.235:237-244
• Oceanographic Processes of Coral Reefs: Physical and Biological links in the Great Barrier Reef by Eric Wolanski
• http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/science/indicators/oceans/sea-surface-temp.html
• McCabe and Wolock.2007. Joint Variability of Global Runoff and Global Sea Surface Temperatures. Journal of Hydrometerology. 9: 816-824

Revision as of 16:04, 26 February 2014

Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs)

The Potential Link Between Sea Surface Temperatures and Flooding What are High SSTs? • Historically what has been the temperature • • How has it increased/ trends in warming? o (from epa.gov/climatechange) “sea surface temperature increased over the 20th century and continues to rise. From 1901 through 2012, temps rose at an average rate of .13 degrees F per decade. o “have been higher during the past three decades than at any other time since observations began.” o “increases in sst have largely occurred over two key periods: between 1910 and 1940 and from about 1960 to the present. SST appear to have cooled between 1880 and 1910” o What are causes of SSTs? • Anthropogenic • Earth’s oceans are warming as a direct result of increased concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that increase air temperatures. • Natural • “Oceans have the ability to release or attain heat from the atmosphere and this exchange of heat is a driving force of atmospheric circulation. Evaporation rates are expected to increase with climate change, resulting in increases in atmospheric water vapor. Water vapor is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide; thus, increased water vapor concentrations contribute to greater downward longwave radiation fluxes that increase the amount of heat retained in the atmosphere. • • Cycle of increased water vapor to stimulate increased global warming and thus continued production of water vapor, leading to a “runaway greenhouse effect” • • Water vapor clouds at high altitudes absorb and re-radiate long-wave radiation, which causes warming by augmenting the greenhouse effect, but low altitude clouds reflect incoming solar radiation which leads to cooling • • Do not know which effect will have greatest impact, but evidence suggests it will lead to an increase in warming which will cause upper ocean temperatures to increase at a faster rate • “Dominant atmospheric factors driving ocean temperature include wind speed, air temperature, cloudiness, and humidity; dominant oceanic factors include heat transport by currents and vertical mixing. Fluctuations in sea surface temperatures vary with the seasons.” (11) • Feedback loops • • Relationship between ocean-atmosphere heat exchanges and global weather and climate patterns • • “In the case of thermal expansion, given an equal mass, the total volume of ocean waters decrease when ocean temperatures drop and expand when temperatures increase” 12 • • Positive Feedback: warming of sea surface temperatures à increased ice melting and evaporation à increased humidity creates more intense storms à more extreme precipitation and wind events. Some areas because of increased evaporation will experience intense surface drying increasing the risk of flooding when intense storms occur. • Effects of SSTs on Coral? • Coral Bleaching • Increase in Severity of Storms • http://water.usgs.gov/nrp/proj.bib/Publications/2008/mccabe_wolock_2008.pdf o Increase flooding of Nutrients  Effects on Coral reef o Increase in Sediment Overload  Effects on Coral Reef Recovery/Treatment Options • Can High SSTs be reversed • Can effects on Coral be mitigated Sources • Russ and McCook. 1999, Potential effects of a cyclone on benthic algae production and yield to grazers on the great barrier reef. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology.235:237-244 • Oceanographic Processes of Coral Reefs: Physical and Biological links in the Great Barrier Reef by Eric Wolanski • http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/science/indicators/oceans/sea-surface-temp.html • McCabe and Wolock.2007. Joint Variability of Global Runoff and Global Sea Surface Temperatures. Journal of Hydrometerology. 9: 816-824

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