Xinhua Silk Road - Belt and Road Portal, China's silk road economic belt and 21st Century Maritime Silk Road Website Xinhua Silk Road - Belt and Road Portal, China's silk road economic belt and 21st Century Maritime Silk Road Website
Subscribe CustomBlackClose

Belt & Road Weekly Subscription Form

download_pop

Research ReportCustomBlackClose

The full edition of the report is available at Xinhua Silk Road Database. You can click the “Table of Content” to have a general understanding of it.

Click on the button below to create your account and get immediate access to thousands of articles.

Start a Free Trial

Xinhua Silk Road Database
Industry

Australian-Chinese research finds deep ocean marine heatwaves underreported

October 17, 2024


Abstract : A world-first research by Australia's national science agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has found that marine heatwaves in the deep ocean are underreported.

CANBERRA, Oct. 17 (Xinhua) -- A world-first research by Australia's national science agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has found that marine heatwaves in the deep ocean are underreported.

According to the research published on Thursday, 80 percent of marine heatwaves that occur at depths below 100 meters do not concur with surface events.

Marine heatwaves, which are prolonged temperature events that can cause severe damage to marine habitats, have been traditionally tracked by satellite data that focuses on surface temperatures.

The new research by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) and CAS indicated that deep-water heatwaves could be significantly underreported.

"Our research reveals that marine heatwaves are often hidden below the surface and occur separately from those on the surface," Ming Feng, a co-author of the study from the CSIRO, said in a media release.

"These findings deepen our understanding of the frequency and intensity of extreme temperature events under the ocean surface, and possible implications."

The world-first global analysis of subsurface marine heatwaves and marine cold spells used long-term temperature observations from eight mooring sites in various ocean basins and over 2 million global historical temperature-profile measurements.

It found that ocean eddies, a type of circular current, have a crucial role in driving and intensifying subsurface marine heatwaves and marine cold spells.

Feng said the research found that marine heatwaves at deeper depths are often associated with eddies and that global warming has intensified temperature extremes in eddies in the past decades, which could result in more severe subsurface marine heatwaves.

The researchers said that better understanding of the drivers of marine heatwaves below the surface will help predict them in the future. 

Scan the QR code and push it to your mobile phone

Keyword: research CAS marine heatwaves deep ocean

Write to Us belt & road login close

Do you want to be a contributor to Xinhua Silk Road and tell us your Belt & Road story? Send your articles to [email protected] and share your stories with more people.

Click on the button below to create your account and get im http://img.silkroad.news.cn/templates/silkroad/en2017te access to thousands of articles.

Start a Free Trial

Ask Us A Question belt & road login close

If you have any questions, please enter them in the box below.

Identifying code Reload

Write to Us belt & road login close

Do you want to be a contributor to Xinhua Silk Road and tell us your Belt & Road story? Send your articles to silkroadweekly@xinhua.org and share your stories with more people.

Click on the button below to create your account and get im http://img.silkroad.news.cn/templates/silkroad/en2017te access to thousands of articles.

Start a Free Trial