The East Australian Current (EAC) plays a major role in regional climate, circulation, and ecosystems, but predicting future changes is hampered by limited understanding of the factors controlling EAC separation. While there has been speculation that the presence of New Zealand may be important for the EAC separation, the prevailing view is that the time-mean partial separation is set by the ocean's response to gradients in the wind stress curl. This study focuses on the role of New Zealand, and the associated adjacent bathymetry, in the partial separation of the EAC and ocean circulation in the Tasman Sea. Here utilizing an eddy-permitting ocean model (NEMO), we find that the complete removal of the New Zealand plateau leads to a smaller f...
An observed warming of the Tasman Sea in recent decades has been linked to a poleward shift of the m...
The confluence region east of New Zealand is one of only a few places in the world where the Antarct...
Like many western boundary currents, the East Australian Current extension is projected to get stron...
The East Australian Current (EAC) plays a major role in regional climate, circulation, and ecosystem...
The traditional view of the circulation in the Tasman Sea includes a coherent, quasi-zonal, eastward...
Meridional heat transport around Australia is determined by Australia’s two poleward flowing boundar...
The waters off the coast of Tasmania have become gradually warmer and saltier over the past 60 year...
The East Australian Current (EAC), like many other subtropical western boundary currents, is believe...
The East Australian Current (EAC) is a complex and highly energetic western boundary system in the s...
The strength of the East Australian Current (EAC) is observed to vary in response to changes in basi...
The East Australian Current (EAC) is the western boundary current of the south Pacific gyre transpor...
The traditional view of the East Australian Current (EAC), as depicted in many schematics, is of a c...
International audienceLike many western boundary currents, the East Australian Current (EAC) extensi...
An observed warming of the Tasman Sea in recent decades has been linked to a poleward shift of the m...
The confluence region east of New Zealand is one of only a few places in the world where the Antarct...
Like many western boundary currents, the East Australian Current extension is projected to get stron...
The East Australian Current (EAC) plays a major role in regional climate, circulation, and ecosystem...
The traditional view of the circulation in the Tasman Sea includes a coherent, quasi-zonal, eastward...
Meridional heat transport around Australia is determined by Australia’s two poleward flowing boundar...
The waters off the coast of Tasmania have become gradually warmer and saltier over the past 60 year...
The East Australian Current (EAC), like many other subtropical western boundary currents, is believe...
The East Australian Current (EAC) is a complex and highly energetic western boundary system in the s...
The strength of the East Australian Current (EAC) is observed to vary in response to changes in basi...
The East Australian Current (EAC) is the western boundary current of the south Pacific gyre transpor...
The traditional view of the East Australian Current (EAC), as depicted in many schematics, is of a c...
International audienceLike many western boundary currents, the East Australian Current (EAC) extensi...
An observed warming of the Tasman Sea in recent decades has been linked to a poleward shift of the m...
The confluence region east of New Zealand is one of only a few places in the world where the Antarct...
Like many western boundary currents, the East Australian Current extension is projected to get stron...