Resemblance of the global depth distribution of internal-tide generation and cold-water coral occurrences

Publication date

2024-04-15

Authors

van der Kaaden, Anna SelmaORCID 0000-0002-8814-1822ISNI 0000000527812110
Van Oevelen, Dick
Mohn, Christian
Soetaert, KarlineORCID 0000-0003-4603-7100ISNI 0000000057316445
Rietkerk, MaxORCID 0000-0002-2698-3848ISNI 0000000047385244
Van De Koppel, Johan
Gerkema, Theo

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Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Internal tides are known to be an important source of mixing in the oceans, especially in the bottom boundary layer. The depth of internal-tide generation therefore seems important for benthic life and the formation of cold-water coral mounds, but internal-tide conversion is generally investigated in a depth-integrated sense. Using both idealized and realistic simulations on continental slopes, we found that the depth of internal-tide generation increases with increasing slope steepness and decreases with intensified shallow stratification. The depth of internal-tide generation also shows a typical latitudinal dependency related to Coriolis effects. Using a global database of cold-water corals, we found that, especially in Northern Hemisphere autumn and winter, the global depth pattern of internal-tide generation correlates (rautumn D 0.70, rwinter D 0.65, p < 0.01) with that of coldwater corals: shallowest near the poles and deepest around the Equator, with a decrease in depth around 25° S and N, and shallower north of the Equator than south. We further found that cold-water corals are situated significantly more often on topography that is steeper than the internal-tide beam (i.e. where supercritical reflection of internal tides occurs) than would be expected from a random distribution: in our study, in 66.9 % of all cases, cold-water corals occurred on a topography that is supercritical to the M2 tide whereas globally only 9.4 % of all topography is supercritical. Our findings underline internal-tide generation and the occurrence of supercritical reflection of internal tides as globally important for cold-water coral growth. The energetic dynamics associated with internal-tide generation and the supercritical reflection of internal tides likely increase the food supply towards the reefs in food-limited winter months. With climate change, stratification is expected to increase. Based on our results, this would decrease the depth of internal-tide generation, possibly creating new suitable habitat for cold-water corals shallower on continental slopes.

Keywords

Oceanography, Palaeontology

Citation

Van Der Kaaden, A S, Van Oevelen, D, Mohn, C, Soetaert, K, Rietkerk, M, Van De Koppel, J & Gerkema, T 2024, 'Resemblance of the global depth distribution of internal-tide generation and cold-water coral occurrences', Ocean Science, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 569-587. https://doi.org/10.5194/os-20-569-2024