In the ocean, the spatial distribution of biogeochemical tracers is affected by their physical transport in the fluid medium. Many tracer distributions such as sea surface chlorophyll and temperature are highly correlated at length scales of 1–100 km on account of a commonality in the transport processes that affect them. We characterize and differentiate between the spatial heterogeneity of the tracers by using a variance-based measure for “patchiness.” When we analyze the satellite-derived fields of surface chlorophyll and temperature, we find that chlorophyll is more patchy than temperature (i.e., a greater proportion of its variance occurs at small scales). We explain such differences in heterogeneity by taking the approach that the observed spatial heterogeneity of a tracer results from a balance between processes that generate variance and those that shift the variance from one length scale to another. The longevity of the tracer determines the extent to which the variance can be shifted to another scale. In the surface ocean, variance introduced at large scales due to geographic variations can be driven to smaller scales by the horizontal stirring and stretching of fluid filaments. On the other hand, small-scale vertical motion associated with fronts introduces small-scale variance that spreads to larger scales if the tracer anomalies are long lasting. For the latter case, we derive a quantitative relationship between a tracer's patchiness and the timescales of processes that modify its concentration in the upper ocean. This relationship links the observed spatial heterogeneity in the system to the processes that contribute to its generation. It lends hope to our being able to use quantitative measures of spatial heterogeneity, like the patchiness parameter defined here, to gain information about processes or, vice versa, to predict how the spatial heterogeneity might be modified as a result of a change in processes.
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Keywords
- Spatial Heterogeneity
- Advance Very High Resolution Radiometer
- Advance Very High Resolution Radiometer
- Ocean Process
- Upwelling Velocity
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Mahadevan, A. (2005). Spatial Heterogeneity and Its Relation to Processes in the Upper Ocean. In: Lovett, G.M., Turner, M.G., Jones, C.G., Weathers, K.C. (eds) Ecosystem Function in Heterogeneous Landscapes. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-24091-8_9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-24091-8_9
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