J. Sharples et al., Internal tide dissipation, mixing, and vertical nitrate flux at the shelf edge of NE New Zealand, J GEO RES-O, 106(C7), 2001, pp. 14069-14081
An internal tide on the NE shelf of New Zealand was observed with a combina
tion of moored temperature loggers and current meters and vertical profilin
g with a microstructure probe. Internal tide energy flux across the shelf e
dge was calculated to be similar to 400 W m(-1), with considerable variabil
ity driven by the passage of a storm through the region. Energy associated
with the internal tide was significantly greater than the energy of the bar
otropic tide or of inertial shear. Dissipation of the internal tide calcula
ted from the energy loss between two of the moorings was estimated to be 15
+/- 10 mW m(-2). The associated vertical eddy diffusivity was (4 +/- 3) x
10(-4) m(2) s(-1). The microstructure observations indicated internal tide-
driven vertical diffusivities at the nitracline of similar to7 x 10(-4) m(2
) s(-1). The observations of vertical eddy diffusivities are combined with
measurements of the vertical nitrate gradient to suggest that mixing driven
by the internal tide is the dominant mechanism for driving diapycnal nutri
ent supply during summer. The calculated flux of about 12 mmol N m(-2) d(-1
) into the photic zone is suggested to drive significant new subsurface pro
duction throughout the summer, amounting to a possible contribution to annu
al new production on the shelf of 100 g C m(-2).