Fabien Roquet
Stockholm University
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Featured researches published by Fabien Roquet.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Martin Biuw; Lars Boehme; Christophe Guinet; Mark A. Hindell; Daniel P. Costa; J.-B. Charrassin; Fabien Roquet; Frédéric Bailleul; Michael P. Meredith; Sally E. Thorpe; Yann Tremblay; Birgitte I. McDonald; Young-Hyang Park; Stephen R. Rintoul; Nl Bindoff; Michael E. Goebel; Daniel E. Crocker; Phil Lovell; J. Nicholson; F. Monks; Michael A. Fedak
Responses by marine top predators to environmental variability have previously been almost impossible to observe directly. By using animal-mounted instruments simultaneously recording movements, diving behavior, and in situ oceanographic properties, we studied the behavioral and physiological responses of southern elephant seals to spatial environmental variability throughout their circumpolar range. Improved body condition of seals in the Atlantic sector was associated with Circumpolar Deep Water upwelling regions within the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, whereas High-Salinity Shelf Waters or temperature/salinity gradients under winter pack ice were important in the Indian and Pacific sectors. Energetic consequences of these variations could help explain recently observed population trends, showing the usefulness of this approach in examining the sensitivity of top predators to global and regional-scale climate variability.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
J.-B. Charrassin; Mark A. Hindell; Stephen R. Rintoul; Fabien Roquet; Serguei Sokolov; Martin Biuw; Daniel P. Costa; Lars Boehme; Phil Lovell; R Coleman; R. Timmermann; A. Meijers; Michael P. Meredith; Young-Hyang Park; Frédéric Bailleul; Michael E. Goebel; Yann Tremblay; Charles-André Bost; Clive R. McMahon; Iain C. Field; Michael A. Fedak; Christophe Guinet
Polar regions are particularly sensitive to climate change, with the potential for significant feedbacks between ocean circulation, sea ice, and the ocean carbon cycle. However, the difficulty in obtaining in situ data means that our ability to detect and interpret change is very limited, especially in the Southern Ocean, where the ocean beneath the sea ice remains almost entirely unobserved and the rate of sea-ice formation is poorly known. Here, we show that southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) equipped with oceanographic sensors can measure ocean structure and water mass changes in regions and seasons rarely observed with traditional oceanographic platforms. In particular, seals provided a 30-fold increase in hydrographic profiles from the sea-ice zone, allowing the major fronts to be mapped south of 60°S and sea-ice formation rates to be inferred from changes in upper ocean salinity. Sea-ice production rates peaked in early winter (April–May) during the rapid northward expansion of the pack ice and declined by a factor of 2 to 3 between May and August, in agreement with a three-dimensional coupled ocean–sea-ice model. By measuring the high-latitude ocean during winter, elephant seals fill a “blind spot” in our sampling coverage, enabling the establishment of a truly global ocean-observing system.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2007
Frédéric Bailleul; J.-B. Charrassin; Pascal Monestiez; Fabien Roquet; Martin Biuw; Christophe Guinet
Southern elephant seals, Mirounga leonina, undertake large-scale oceanic movements to access favourable foraging areas. Successful foraging areas of elephant seals from the Kerguelen Islands are investigated here in relation to oceanographic parameters. Movements and diving activity of the seals as well as oceanographic data were collected through a new generation of satellite relayed devices measuring and transmitting locations, pressure, temperature and salinity. For the first time, we have associated foraging behaviour, determined by high increased sinuosity in tracks, and dive density (i.e. number of dives performed per kilometre covered), and changes in body condition, determined by variations in drift rate obtained from drift dives, to identify the oceanographic conditions of successful foraging zones for this species. Two main sectors, one close to the Antarctic continent and the other along the Polar Front (PF), where both foraging activity and body condition increase, seem to be of particular interest for the seals. Within these regions, some seals tended to focus their foraging activity on zones with particular temperature signatures. Along the Antarctic continent, some seals targeted colder waters on the sea bottom during benthic dives, while at the PF the favourable zones tended to be warmer. The possible negative effect of colder waters in Antarctic on the swimming performances of potential fish or squid prey could explain the behaviour of elephant seals in these zones, while warmer waters within the PF could correspond to the optimal conditions for potential myctophid prey of elephant seals.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
Fabien Roquet; Carl Wunsch; Gael Forget; Patrick Heimbach; Christophe Guinet; Gilles Reverdin; Jean-Benoit Charrassin; Frédéric Bailleul; Daniel P. Costa; Luis A. Hückstädt; Kimberly T. Goetz; Kit M. Kovacs; Christian Lydersen; Martin Biuw; Ole Anders Nøst; Horst Bornemann; Joachim Ploetz; Marthan Nieuwoudt Bester; Trevor McIntyre; Mark A. Hindell; Clive R. McMahon; Gd Williams; Robert G. Harcourt; Iain C. Field; Léon Chafik; Keith W. Nicholls; Lars Boehme; Michael A. Fedak
Over the last decade, several hundred seals have been equipped with conductivity-temperature-depth sensors in the Southern Ocean for both biological and physical oceanographic studies. A calibrated collection of seal-derived hydrographic data is now available, consisting of more than 165,000 profiles. The value of these hydrographic data within the existing Southern Ocean observing system is demonstrated herein by conducting two state estimation experiments, differing only in the use or not of seal data to constrain the system. Including seal-derived data substantially modifies the estimated surface mixed-layer properties and circulation patterns within and south of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Agreement with independent satellite observations of sea ice concentration is improved, especially along the East Antarctic shelf. Instrumented animals efficiently reduce a critical observational gap, and their contribution to monitoring polar climate variability will continue to grow as data accuracy and spatial coverage increase.
Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2011
Fabien Roquet; Jean-Benoit Charrassin; Stéphane Marchand; Lars Boehme; Michael A. Fedak; Gilles Reverdin; Christophe Guinet
A delayed-mode calibration procedure is presented to improve the quality of hydrographic data from CTD‐Satellite Relay Data Loggers (CTD‐SRDL) deployed on elephant seals. This procedure is applied on a dataset obtained with 10 CTD‐SRDLs deployed at Kerguelen Islands in 2007. A comparison of CTD‐ SRDLs with a ship-based CTD system is first presented. A pressure-effect correction, linear with pressure, is deduced for both temperature and salinity measurements. An external field effect on the conductivity sensor is alsodetected, inducinganadditionalsalinityoffset.Thesalinityoffsetcannotbeestimateddirectlyfromthe ship-based CTD comparisons, because the attachment of the CTD‐SRDL on the seal head modifies the magnitudeoftheexternalfieldeffect.Twomethodsareproposedforestimatingaposteriorithesalinityoffset. The first method uses the stable salinity maximum characterizing the Lower Circumpolar Deep Water (LCDW), sampled by seals foraging south of the Southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current Front. Where this approach is not possible, a statistical method of cross-comparison of CTD‐SRDLs surface salinity measurements is used over the sluggish Northern Kerguelen Plateau. Accuracies are respectively estimated as 60.028C for temperature and 60.1 for derived salinity without corrections. The delayed-mode calibration significantly improves the CTD‐SRDL data, improving accuracies to 60.018C and 60.03, respectively. A better salinity accuracy of 60.02 is achieved when the LCDW method can be used. For CTD‐SRDLs where ship-basedCTD comparisons are not available,the expectedaccuracy would be 60.028C for temperatureand 60.04 for the derived salinity.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2009
Young-Hyang Park; Frédéric Vivier; Fabien Roquet; Elodie Kestenare
(1) LOCEAN-IPSL, Museum Nationale d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France ([email protected]), (2) LOCEAN-IPSL, Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France ([email protected]), (3) MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA ([email protected]), (4) LEGOS, Toulouse, France ([email protected]), (5) LOCEAN-IPSL, Museum Nationale d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France ([email protected]), (6) LOCEAN-IPSL, Museum Nationale d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France ([email protected])
Scientific Data | 2014
Fabien Roquet; Gd Williams; Mark A. Hindell; Robert G. Harcourt; Clive R. McMahon; Christophe Guinet; Jean-Benoit Charrassin; Gilles Reverdin; Lars Boehme; Phil Lovell; Michael A. Fedak
The instrumentation of southern elephant seals with satellite-linked CTD tags has offered unique temporal and spatial coverage of the Southern Indian Ocean since 2004. This includes extensive data from the Antarctic continental slope and shelf regions during the winter months, which is outside the conventional areas of Argo autonomous floats and ship-based studies. This landmark dataset of around 75,000 temperature and salinity profiles from 20–140 °E, concentrated on the sector between the Kerguelen Islands and Prydz Bay, continues to grow through the coordinated efforts of French and Australian marine research teams. The seal data are quality controlled and calibrated using delayed-mode techniques involving comparisons with other existing profiles as well as cross-comparisons similar to established protocols within the Argo community, with a resulting accuracy of ±0.03 °C in temperature and ±0.05 in salinity or better. The data offer invaluable new insights into the water masses, oceanographic processes and provides a vital tool for oceanographers seeking to advance our understanding of this key component of the global ocean climate.
Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2011
Fabien Roquet; Carl Wunsch; Gurvan Madec
Pathways of wind-power input into the ocean general circulation are analyzed using Ekman theory. Direct rates of wind work can be calculated through the wind stress acting on the surface geostrophicflow. However, because that energy is transported laterally in the Ekman layer, the injection into the geostrophic interior is actuallycontrolledby Ekmanpumping,with a patterndeterminedby the windcurl ratherthanthe wind itself. Regions of power injection into the geostrophic interior are thus generally shifted poleward compared to regions of direct wind-power input, most notably in the Southern Ocean, where on average energy enters the interior 108 south of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current core. An interpretation of the wind-power input to the interior is proposed, expressed as a downward flux of pressure work. This energy flux is a measure of the work done by the Ekman pumping against the surface elevation pressure, helping to maintain the observed anomaly of sea surface height relative to the global-mean sea level.
Nature Communications | 2016
Gd Williams; Laura Herraiz-Borreguero; Fabien Roquet; Takeshi Tamura; Kay I. Ohshima; Yasushi Fukamachi; Alexander D. Fraser; Libao Gao; H. Chen; Clive R. McMahon; Robert G. Harcourt; Mark A. Hindell
A fourth production region for the globally important Antarctic bottom water has been attributed to dense shelf water formation in the Cape Darnley Polynya, adjoining Prydz Bay in East Antarctica. Here we show new observations from CTD-instrumented elephant seals in 2011–2013 that provide the first complete assessment of dense shelf water formation in Prydz Bay. After a complex evolution involving opposing contributions from three polynyas (positive) and two ice shelves (negative), dense shelf water (salinity 34.65–34.7) is exported through Prydz Channel. This provides a distinct, relatively fresh contribution to Cape Darnley bottom water. Elsewhere, dense water formation is hindered by the freshwater input from the Amery and West Ice Shelves into the Prydz Bay Gyre. This study highlights the susceptibility of Antarctic bottom water to increased freshwater input from the enhanced melting of ice shelves, and ultimately the potential collapse of Antarctic bottom water formation in a warming climate.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
Violaine Pellichero; Jean-Baptiste Sallée; Sunke Schmidtko; Fabien Roquet; Jean-Benoit Charrassin
The oceanic mixed-layer is the gateway for the exchanges between the atmosphere and the ocean; in this layer all hydrographic ocean properties are set for months to millennia. A vast area of the Southern Ocean is seasonally capped by sea-ice, which alters the characteristics of the ocean mixed-layer. The interaction between the ocean mixed-layer and sea-ice plays a key role for water-mass transformation, the carbon cycle, sea-ice dynamics, and ultimately for the climate as a whole. However, the structure and characteristics of the under-ice mixed-layer are poorly understood due to the sparseness of in-situ observations and measurements. In this study, we combine distinct sources of observations to overcome this lack in our understanding of the Polar Regions. Working with Elephant Seal-derived observations, ship-based and Argo float observations, we describe the seasonal cycle of the ocean mixed-layer characteristics and stability of the ocean mixed-layer over the Southern Ocean and specifically under sea-ice. Mixed-layer heat and freshwater budgets are used to investigate the main forcing mechanisms of the mixed-layer seasonal cycle. The seasonal variability of sea surface salinity and temperature are primarily driven by surface processes, dominated by sea-ice freshwater flux for the salt budget, and by air-sea flux for the heat budget. Ekman advection, vertical diffusivity and vertical entrainment play only secondary roles.Our results suggest that changes in regional sea-ice distribution and annual duration, as currently observed, widely affect the buoyancy budget of the underlying mixed-layer, and impact large-scale water-mass formation and transformation with far reaching consequences for ocean ventilation. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.