|
Scientists
Discover New Ocean Current
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Hi-Res
Version
The
North Pacific Gyre Oscillation explains changes in salinity,
nutrients and chlorophyll seen in the Northeast Pacific.
|
Credit:
Georgia Institute of Technology
Scientists at the Georgia
Institute of Technology have discovered a new climate pattern
called the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation. This new pattern
explains, for the first time, changes in the water that are
important in helping commercial fishermen understand fluctuations
in the fish stock. They’re also finding that as the
temperature of the Earth is warming, large fluctuations in these
factors could help climatologists predict how the oceans will
respond in a warmer world. The research appears in the April 30
edition of the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
“We’ve been able to
explain, for the first time, the changes in salinity, nutrients
and chlorophyll that we see in the Northeast Pacific,” said
Emanuele Di Lorenzo, assistant professor in Georgia Tech’s
School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences.
Since 1945,
fishermen in the California current of the Pacific Ocean have
been tracking temperature, salinity and nutrients, among other
things, in the ocean to help them predict changes in fish
populations like sardines and anchovies that are important for
the industry. Studying this data, along with satellite images, Di
Lorenzo discovered a pattern of current that he named the North
Pacific Gyre Oscillation.
Recent satellite data suggest
that this current is undergoing intensification as the
temperature of the Earth has risen over the past few decades.
"Although the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation is part
of a natural cycle of the climate system, we find evidence
suggesting that its amplitude may increase as global warming
progresses,” said Di Lorenzo.
If this is true, this
newly found climate pattern mey help scientists predict how the
ecosystem of the Pacific Ocean is likely to change if the world
continues to warm, as predicted by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change.
Source:
Georgia Institute of Technology

|
Scientific
Frontline®
RSS
Feeds
Scientific
Frontline®
The
Comm Center
The
E.A.R.®
World
News Report
SFL
Gallery
Cassini
Gallery
Mars
Gallery
Missions
Gallery
Exploration
Gallery
Space
Weather Alerts
Stellar
Nights®
Events
Directors
Chair
Scientific
Frontline®
Is
supported in part by “Readers Like You”
|