0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views6 pages

Ocean Temperature and Salinity

Uploaded by

rajbhagat
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views6 pages

Ocean Temperature and Salinity

Uploaded by

rajbhagat
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6

 Temperature Distribution of Oceans

 important for determining


 movement of large volumes of water (vertical and horizontal ocean
currents),
 type and distribution of marine organisms at various depths of oceans,
 climate of coastal lands, etc.

 How does deep water marine organisms survive


 Photic zone -only about few hundred meters.- depends on lot of factors
like turbidity, presence of algae etc
 no enough primary producers below few hundred meters
 At sea bottom- bacteria -make use of heat -supplied by earth’s interior-
to prepare food.-are the primary producers.
 Other organisms-feed on these primary producers
 But productivity -too low compared to ocean surface.

 diurnal range of ocean temperatures too small?, Why


 Heating and cooling of oceanic water-slower than land
 due to vertical and horizontal mixing
 high specific heat of water.
 (More time required to heat up a Kg of water compared to solid-at same
temperatures and equal energy supply).

 Source of Heat in Oceans


 Absorption of sun’s radiation.
 conventional currents:ocean water at great depths -heated faster
than upper water layers-convectional oceanic circulations develop-
causing circulation of heat
 friction caused by surface wind and tidal currents

 ocean water is cooled by


 Back radiation (heat budget)-reradiated as long wave radiation
 Evaporation:
 Exchange of heat between sea and atmosphere

 Factors Affecting Temperature Distribution of Oceans


 Insolation:average daily duration of insolation and its intensity.
 Heat loss:by reflection, scattering, evaporation and radiation.
 Albedo:of the sea (depending on the angle of sun rays).
 salinity-[Salinity increased == Boiling point increased ==
Evaporation decreased].
 presence of submarine ridges and sills [Marginal Seas]:due to lesser
mixing of waters
 shape of the ocean:latitudinally extensive seas-warmer surface water
than longitudinally extensive sea [Mediterranean Sea higher
temperature than Gulf of California].
 enclosed seas (Marginal Seas – Gulf, Bay etc.)-in low latitudes- record
relatively higher temperature than open seas;-in high latitudes -lower
temperature than open seas
 Unequal distribution of land and water:-oceans in northern
hemisphere -more heat-contact with larger extent of land
 Local weather conditions such as cyclones.
 Prevalent winds-(off-shore winds- drive warm surface water away
from the coast-upwelling of cold water from below
 Ocean currents: Warm ocean currents raise temperature in cold areas -
while cold currents decrease temperature in warm ocean areas
 eg-Gulf stream (warm current) raises temperature near eastern coast
of North America

 Vertical Temperature Distribution of Oceans


 Photic or euphotic zone-from upper surface to ~200 m.-receives
adequate solar insolation.
 Aphotic zone-from 200 m to ocean bottom;-not receive adequate
sunrays.

 Thermocline-
 boundary region between surface waters and deeper layers.-around
100 – 400 m below sea surface-
 boundary region, from where - rapid decrease of temperature-approach
0° C.

 Three-Layer System
 first layer-500m thick-top layer of warm oceanic water-temperatures
between 20° and 25° C.
 within tropical region- present throughout the year -but in mid-latitudes
-develops only during summer.

 second layer-thermocline layer-characterized by rapid decrease in


temperature with increasing depth.-500 -1,000 m thick.
 third layer-cold-extends up to deep ocean floor.

 General behavior
 rate of decrease of temperature with depths -greater at equator
than at poles.
 surface temperature and its downward decrease-influenced
by upwelling of bottom water
 In cold Arctic and Antarctic regions-cold water sinks + moves towards
lower latitudes
 In equatorial regions -surface water sometimes -lower temperature
and salinity -due to high rainfall- whereas layers below it -higher
temperatures.
 enclosed seas in both lower and higher latitudes -higher temperatures
at bottom
 enclosed seas of low latitudes -like Sargasso Sea, Red Sea
and Mediterranean Sea -high bottom temperatures -due to high
insolation throughout year + lesser mixing of warm and cold’ waters.
 high latitude enclosed seas- bottom layers of water -warmer- as water
of higher salinity and temperature -moves from outer ocean -as a sub-
surface current.
 presence of submarine barriers-lead to different temperature conditions-
two sides of barrier. -example, at Strait of Bab-el-Mandeb,-submarine
barrier -subsurface water in strait -at high temperature compared to
water at same level in Indian ocean.

 Horizontal Temperature Distribution of Oceans


 average temperature-27°C-decreases from the equator towards poles.
 rate of decrease of temperature -with increasing latitude -generally
0.5°C per latitude
 horizontal temperature distribution -shown by isothermal lines, ie.,
lines joining places of equal temperature.
 example-in February- isothermal lines closely spaced in Newfoundland
-and then isotherms widen out- make; a bulge towards coast of Norway
 cause -cold Labrador Current-reduces temperature of region more
sharply than in other places

 Range of Ocean Temperature


 even if solar insolation [maximum at noon[ ocean surface
temperature highest at 2 p.m.
 average diurnal range of temperature-barely 1 degree in oceans and
seas.
 diurnal range-highest-if sky -free of clouds and atmosphere is calm.
 annual range-Ifluenced by annual variation of insolation- nature of
ocean currents and prevailing winds.
 maximum in August and minimum in February
 northern Pacific and northern Atlantic oceans - greater range of
temperature -than southern parts -due to a difference in force of
prevailing winds from land


 Ocean Salinity
 Salinity-amount of salt (in gm) dissolved in 1,000 gm (1 kg) of
seawater.
 Factors Affecting Ocean Salinity
 depend mainly on evaporation, for example, Mediterranean sea.
 precipitation-eg-equaltorial regions-low salinity
 in coastal regions-influenced by fresh water flow from rivers
 in polar regions-processes of freezing and thawing of ice.
 Atmospheric pressure and Wind direction:anti-cyclonic conditions with
stable air and high temperature increase salinity
 ocean currents-warm currents near equatorial region -push away salts
from eastern margins -accumulate them near western margins of
oceans
 Temperature and density:Salinity, temperature and density of
water- interrelated-any change in temperature or density-
influences salinity of an area.

 Horizontal distribution of salinity


 salinity for normal open ocean ranges between 33 and 37.
 land locked Red Sea- 41 o/oo
 hot and dry regions-salinity sometimes reaches to 70.
 estuaries and the Arctic-fluctuates from 0 – 35, seasonally

 Pacific-around 35-36
 Atlantic-average salinity-around 20-37.parts per thousand
 Indian Ocean-average salinity-35
 low salinity-Bay of Bengal due to influx of river water by river Ganga.
 Arabian Sea -higher salinity -high evaporation + low influx of fresh
water.

 Marginal seas
 North Sea-higher salinity-saline water brought by North Atlantic Drift.
 Baltic Sea- low salinity- influx of river waters in large quantity.
 Mediterranean Sea-higher salinity due to high evaporation.
 Black Sea-low Salinity-fresh water influx by rivers

 Inland seas and lakes-high-regular supply of salt by ‘ rivers falling into


them.
 Great Salt Lake , (Utah, USA), Dead Sea and Lake Van in Turkey is
220, 240 and 330 respectively.

 Sub-Surface Salinity
 With depth, salinity also varies,
 In high latitudes-salinity increases with depth
 In middle latitudes-increases up to 35 metres -then it decreases
 At equator, surface salinity is lower.

 Vertical Distribution of Salinity


 Salinity changes with depth- but changes depends upon location of the
sea
 Salinity at surface -increases by loss of water to ice or evaporation-
decreased by input of fresh waters,
 . Salinity decreases with increasing depth.
 Salinity at depth-fixed-no water is ‘lost’, or salt is ‘added.’
 lower salinity water rests above higher salinity dense water.
 High salinity seawater sinks below lower salinity water.
 Salinity, increases with depth -distinct zone called halocline -where
salinity increases sharply.
 leads to stratification by salinity.

 Role of Ocean Salinity


 determines-
 compressibility,
 thermal expansion,
 temperature
 , density
 , absorption of insolation,
 evaporation
 humidity.
 affects ocean circulation-Ocean water from bottom-from poles
to equator. Surface water- from equator to poles
 Biodiversity:Ocean water -heavier than fresh water-enables plankton to
floa

 Thermohaline Circulation
 deep-ocean currents-driven by differences in water’s density,-controlled
by temperature (thermo) and salinity (haline).known as
thermohaline circulation.
 called the ocean conveyor belt,
 -
 How Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) works?

 As warm water flows northwards in Atlantic- it cools-evaporation


increases its salt content.
 Low temperature + high salt content- raise density of wate-sink deep
into ocean.
 cold, dense water deep below slowly spreads southward.
 Eventually-gets pulled back to surface -warms again-circulation is
complete.

 Importance of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation


(AMOC)
 aids in distributing heat and energy around earth (heat budget).
 Western Europe’s climate -less harsh in winters (Gulf Stream, North
Atlantic Drift).
 acts as a carbon sink

 Cause of concern
 AMOC-undergone exceptional weakening-last 150 years
 IPCC 6th Assessment Report- AMOC will weaken over 21st Century -
as greenhouse gases increase.
 because as atmosphere warms-surface ocean retains more heat. +
increases in rainfall and ice melt-lower salinity
 will make ocean water lighter + reduce sinking in conveyor belt
(weaker AMOC).
 weaker AMOC-bring less warm water northwards-will partly offset the
warming effect of western Europe.

 Causes:
 global warming-part of Arctic’s ice called “Last Ice Area” -also
melted.
 Freshwater inflow from melting of Greenland ice sheet
 Increasing precipitation and river run-off.
 Weakening of Gulf Stream
 Dilution dues to increased rainfall and river runoff

 Effects of AMOC Slowdown


 decrease in marine productivity in the North Atlantic
 Colder Europe:decline in warming effect of NAD + Gulf stream
 more storms in Northern Europe,
 less Sahelian summer rainfall
 less South Asian summer rainfall,
 shift monsoons in South America and Africa.
 reduced number of tropical cyclones in the Atlantic
 Socio-economic impacts: On agriculture, wildlife, transport,
 increase in regional sea level along northeast coast of North America.
 Collapse of AMOC: AMOC is one of the nine “tipping points” -could
push parts of
 Earth system into abrupt or irreversible change

 may induce changes in -


 ENSO [El Niño–Southern Oscillation] characteristics,
 dieback of Amazon rainforest
 shrinking of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
 southern migration of ITCZ
 large warming of Southern Ocean etc

 Indian Ocean’s role


 rising temperatures in Indian Ocean- can help boost AMOC
 As Indian Ocean warms faster- additional precipitation.
 draws more air -from other parts of world -to Indian Ocean-including
the Atlantic.
 will lead to less precipitation in Atlantic Ocean.
 Less precipitation -lead to higher salinity-tropical portion of Atlantic.
 saltier water-will get cold much quicker than usual -sink faster.
 would act as jump start for AMOC-intensifying the circulation.

 Pycnocline
 Pycnocline -a boundary separating two liquid layers of different
densities.
 exists in oceans at depth of 100-1000 m- because -large density
difference between surface waters and deep ocean water.
 effectively prevents vertical currents except in polar regions.
 almost absent in polar regions-because of sinking of cold water near
poles.
 Formation of pycnocline -result from changes in salinity or temperature.
 pycnocline zone -extremely stable-acts as a barrier for surface
processes.
 changes in salinity or temperature -very small -below pycnocline- but
are seasonal in surface waters

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy