Ocean convergence and the dispersion of flotsam

Floating oil, plastics, and marine organisms are continually redistributed by ocean surface currents. Prediction of their resulting distribution on the surface is a fundamental, long-standing, and practically important problem. The dominant paradigm is dispersion within the dynamical context of a nondivergent flow: objects initially close together will on average spread apart but the area of surface patches of material does not change. Although this paradigm is likely valid at mesoscales, larger than 100 km in horizontal scale, recent theoretical studies of submesoscales (less than similar to 10 km) predict strong surface convergences and downwelling associated with horizontal density fronts and cyclonic vortices. Here we show that such structures can dramatically concentrate floating material. More than half of an array of similar to 200 surface drifters covering similar to 20 x 20 km(2) converged into a 60 x 60 m region within a week, a factor of more than 105 decrease in area, before slowly dispersing. As predicted, the convergence occurred at density fronts and with cyclonic vorticity. A zipperlike structure may play an important role. Cyclonic vorticity and vertical velocity reached 0.001 s(-1) and 0.01 ms(-1), respectively, which is much larger than usually inferred. This suggests a paradigm in which nearby objects form submesoscale clusters, and these clusters then spread apart. Together, these effects set both the overall extent and the finescale texture of a patch of floating material. Material concentrated at submesoscale convergences can create unique communities of organisms, amplify impacts of toxic material, and create opportunities to more efficiently recover such material.

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Related Dataset #1 : Lagrangian Submesoscale Experiment (LASER) Lagrangian float

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Author D’Asaro, Eric A.
Shcherbina, Andrey Y.
Klymak, Jody M.
Molemaker, Jeroen
Novelli, Guillaume
Guigand, Cédric M.
Haza, Angelique C.
Haus, Brian K.
Ryan, Edward H.
Jacobs, Gregg A.
Huntley, Helga S.
Laxague, Nathan J. M.
Chen, Shuyi
Judt, Falco
McWilliams, James C.
Barkan, Roy
Kirwan, A. D.
Poje, Andrew C.
Özgökmen, Tamay M.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2018-02-06T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Resource Version N/A
Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T19:17:14.182516
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:21335
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation D’Asaro, Eric A., Shcherbina, Andrey Y., Klymak, Jody M., Molemaker, Jeroen, Novelli, Guillaume, Guigand, Cédric M., Haza, Angelique C., Haus, Brian K., Ryan, Edward H., Jacobs, Gregg A., Huntley, Helga S., Laxague, Nathan J. M., Chen, Shuyi, Judt, Falco, McWilliams, James C., Barkan, Roy, Kirwan, A. D., Poje, Andrew C., Özgökmen, Tamay M.. (2018). Ocean convergence and the dispersion of flotsam. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d71r6t5g. Accessed 24 June 2025.

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