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Featured researches published by Héloïse Lavigne.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Observing mixed layer depth, nitrate and chlorophyll concentrations in the northwestern Mediterranean: A combined satellite and NO3 profiling floats experiment

Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Héloïse Lavigne; Florent Besson; Hervé Claustre; Laurent Coppola; Nicole Garcia; Agathe Laes-Huon; Serge Le Reste; Damien Malardé; Christophe Migon; Pascal Morin; Laurent Mortier; Antoine Poteau; Louis Prieur; Patrick Raimbault; Pierre Testor

Two profiling floats, equipped with nitrate concentration sensors were deployed in the northwestern Mediterranean from summer 2012 to summer 2013. Satellite ocean color data were extracted to evaluate surface chlorophyll concentration at float locations. Time series of mixed layer depths and nitrate and chlorophyll concentrations were analyzed to characterize the interplay between the physical-chemical and biological dynamics in the area. Deep convection (mixed layer depth > 1000 m) was observed in January–February, although high-nitrate surface concentrations could be already observed in December. Chlorophyll increase is observed since December, although high values were observed only in March. The early nitrate availability in subsurface layers, which is likely due to the permanent cyclonic circulation of the area, appears to drive the bloom onset. The additional nitrate supply associated to the deep convection events, although strengthening the overall nitrate uptake, seems decoupled of the December increase of chlorophyll.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Seasonal variability of nutrient concentrations in the Mediterranean Sea: Contribution of Bio‐Argo floats

Orens Pasqueron de Fommervault; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Antoine Mangin; Romain Serra; Christophe Migon; Hervé Claustre; Héloïse Lavigne; Maurizio Ribera d'Alcalà; Louis Prieur; Vincent Taillandier; Catherine Schmechtig; Antoine Poteau; Edouard Leymarie; Aurélie Dufour; Florent Besson; Grigor Obolensky

In 2013, as part of the French NAOS (Novel Argo Oceanic observing System) program, five profiling floats equipped with nitrate sensors (SUNA-V2) together with CTD and bio-optical sensors were deployed in the Mediterranean Sea. At present day, more than 500 profiles of physical and biological parameters were acquired, and significantly increased the number of available nitrate data in the Mediterranean Sea. Results obtained from floats confirm the general view of the basin, and the well-known west-to-east gradient of oligotrophy. At seasonal scale, the north western Mediterranean displays a clear temperate pattern sustained by both deep winter mixed layer and shallow nitracline. The other sampled areas follow a subtropical regime (nitracline depth and mixed layer depth are generally decoupled). Float data also permit to highlight the major contribution of high-frequency processes in controlling the nitrate supply during winter in the north western Mediterranean Sea and in altering the nitrate stock in subsurface in the eastern basin.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Multiscale Observations of Deep Convection in the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea during Winter 2012–2013 Using Multiple Platforms

Pierre Testor; Anthony Bosse; Loïc Houpert; Félix Margirier; Laurent Mortier; Hervé Legoff; Denis Dausse; Matthieu Labaste; Johannes Karstensen; Daniel J. Hayes; Antonio Olita; Alberto Ribotti; Katrin Schroeder; Jacopo Chiggiato; Reiner Onken; Emma Heslop; Baptiste Mourre; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Nicolas Mayot; Héloïse Lavigne; Orens Pasqueron de Fommervault; Laurent Coppola; Louis Prieur; Vincent Taillandier; Xavier Durrieu de Madron; François Bourrin; Gaël Many; Pierre Damien; Claude Estournel; Patrick Marsaleix

During winter 2012–2013, open‐ocean deep convection which is a major driver for the thermohaline circulation and ventilation of the ocean, occurred in the Gulf of Lions (Northwestern Mediterranean Sea) and has been thoroughly documented thanks in particular to the deployment of several gliders, Argo profiling floats, several dedicated ship cruises, and a mooring array during a period of about a year. Thanks to these intense observational efforts, we show that deep convection reached the bottom in winter early in February 2013 in a area of maximum 28 ± 3 109 m2. We present new quantitative results with estimates of heat and salt content at the subbasin scale at different time scales (on the seasonal scale to a 10 days basis) through optimal interpolation techniques, and robust estimates of the deep water formation rate of 2.0 ± 0.2 Sv. We provide an overview of the spatiotemporal coverage that has been reached throughout the seasons this year and we highlight some results based on data analysis and numerical modeling that are presented in this special issue. They concern key circulation features for the deep convection and the subsequent bloom such as Submesoscale Coherent Vortices (SCVs), the plumes, and symmetric instability at the edge of the deep convection area.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

A submesoscale coherent vortex in the Ligurian Sea: From dynamical barriers to biological implications

Anthony Bosse; Pierre Testor; Nicolas Mayot; Louis Prieur; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Laurent Mortier; Hervé Le Goff; Claire Gourcuff; Laurent Coppola; Héloïse Lavigne; Patrick Raimbault

In June 2013, a glider equipped with oxygen and fluorescence sensors has been used to extensively sample an anticyclonic Submesoscale Coherent Vortex (SCV) in the Ligurian Sea (NW Mediterranean Sea). Those measurements are complemented by full-depth CTD casts (T, S, and oxygen) and water samples documenting nutrients and phytoplankton pigments within the SCV and outside. The SCV has a very homogeneous core of oxygenated waters between 300 and 1200 m formed 4.5 months earlier during the winter deep convection event. It has a strong dynamical signature with peak velocities at 700 m depth of 13.9 cm s−1 in cyclogeostrophic balance. The eddy has a small radius of 6.2 km corresponding to high Rossby number of −0.45. The vorticity at the eddy center reaches −0.8f. Cross-stream isopycnic diffusion of tracers between the eddy core and the surroundings is found to be very limited due to dynamical barriers set by the SCV associated with a diffusivity coefficient of about 0.2 m2 s−1. The deep core is nutrients-depleted with concentrations of nitrate, phosphate, and silicate, 13–18% lower than the rich surrounding waters. However, the nutriclines are shifted of about 20–50 m toward the surface thus increasing the nutrients availability for phytoplankton. Chlorophyll-a concentrations at the deep chlorophyll maximum are subsequently about twice bigger as compared to outside. Pigments further reveal the predominance of nanophytoplankton inside the eddy and an enhancement of the primary productivity. This study demonstrates the important impact of postconvective SCVs on nutrients distribution and phytoplankton community, as well as on the subsequent primary production and carbon sequestration.


Biogeosciences | 2009

Technical Note: Approaches and software tools to investigate the impact of ocean acidification

Jean-Pierre Gattuso; Héloïse Lavigne


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Enhancing the comprehension of mixed layer depth control on the Mediterranean phytoplankton phenology

Héloïse Lavigne; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Christophe Migon; Hervé Claustre; Pierre Testor; Maurizio Ribera d'Alcalà; Rosario Lavezza; Loïc Houpert; Louis Prieur


Progress in Oceanography | 2015

Seasonal cycle of the mixed layer, the seasonal thermocline and the upper-ocean heat storage rate in the Mediterranean Sea derived from observations

Loïc Houpert; Pierre Testor; X. Durrieu de Madron; Samuel Somot; Fabrizio D’Ortenzio; Claude Estournel; Héloïse Lavigne


Progress in Oceanography | 2013

Temporal variability of vertical export flux at the DYFAMED time-series station (Northwestern Mediterranean Sea)

Lars-Eric Heimbürger; Héloïse Lavigne; Christophe Migon; Fabrizio D’Ortenzio; Claude Estournel; Laurent Coppola; Juan-Carlos Miquel


Biogeosciences | 2016

Interannual variability of the Mediterranean trophic regimes from ocean color satellites

Nicolas Mayot; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; Maurizio Ribera d'Alcalà; Héloïse Lavigne; Hervé Claustre


Biogeosciences | 2015

On the vertical distribution of the chlorophyll a concentration in the Mediterranean Sea: a basin scale and seasonal approach

Héloïse Lavigne; Fabrizio D'Ortenzio; M. Ribera d'Alcalà; Hervé Claustre; R. Sauzède; Miroslav Gačić

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Loïc Houpert

Scottish Association for Marine Science

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