Exploring Salinitys Impact on Makassar Straits Seasonality

Chinese Academy of Sciences

The Makassar Strait Throughflow (MST) accounts for approximately 77% of the total volume transport of the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF), and it influences mass and heat exchanges between the Indo-Pacific basin and global climate.

"Freshwater plug" hypothesis about the seasonal variability of MST was extensively cited in studies. However, there has long been a dearth of quantitative research elucidating both the existence and specific contribution of salinity effect.

Recently, an international team led by Prof. HU Shijian from the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IOCAS) has quantified the contribution of salinity effect on the seasonal variability of MST with long-term observations and high-resolution numerical simulations, and found that the freshwater forcing and salinity effect dominate the seasonal change of MST.

The study was published inGeophysical Research Letters on Oct. 31.

Since MST is controlled by pressure gradient along the Makassar Strait, the researchers focused on the role of salinity change in meridional gradient of steric height in the Makassar Strait.

They compared the in-situ observations from Arlindo and Monitoring ITF with high-resolution reanalysis, and found that MST is a southward current with significant seasonality.

In boreal winter, a weak northward current is present in the upper layer of the southern Makassar Strait, which is subject to the northward dynamic height gradient influenced by both the halosteric and thermosteric components. Quantitatively speaking, the halosteric dynamic height closely associated with the seasonal cycle of salinity contributes 69.6% ± 11.7% to the total seasonal variability of the sea surface dynamic height gradient within the Makassar Strait. The northwest monsoon leads to an increasing in freshwater transport through the Karimata Strait and increasing of local precipitation in the Java Sea, which further causes a decline of salinity and an anomalous northward pressure gradient in the Makassar Strait, and hence resulting in a weakened throughflow. The opposite occurs in boreal summer.

"Our study not only confirms the importance of freshwater plug and salinity effect mechanism in the seasonality of MST, but also deepens our understanding of the ITF dynamics," said Prof. HU.

Fig. 1 Seasonal variability of rainfall (colored), sea surface current field (black arrows), wind field (white arrows), and salinity in the Indonesian seas (Image by IOCAS)
Fig. 2 Seasonal cycles (a, b, c, d) of the absolute dynamic topography (ADT), sea surface dynamic height (DH), thermosteric dynamic height and thermosteric dynamic height, and (e) the differences between the southern (4° S-2.8 °S) and northern (2.8° S-2 °N) parts of the Makassar Strait (Image by IOCAS)
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