Volcanic impacts on the oceans
Explosive volcanic eruptions affect the global climate in several ways.
Lowering sea surface temperature
One main impact of volcanoes is the injection of sulfur-bearing gases into the stratosphere, which oxidize to form sulfate aerosols. Stratospheric sulfur aerosols spread around the globe by the atmospheric circulation, producing surface cooling by scattering solar radiation back to space. This cooling effect on the ocean surface usually lasts for several years as the lifetime of sulfate aerosols is about 2–3 years. However, in the subsurface ocean the cooling signal may persist for a longer time and may have impacts on some decadal variabilities, such as the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation.Volcanic aerosols from huge volcanoes directly reduce global mean sea surface temperature by approximately 0.2-0.3 °C, milder than global total surface temperature drop, which is ~0.3 to 0.5 °C, according to both global temperature records and model simulations. It usually takes several years to be back to normal.
Decreasing ocean heat content
The volcanic cooling signals in ocean heat content can persist for much longer time, far beyond the duration of volcanic forcing.Several studies have revealed that Krakatau’s effect in the heat content can be as long as one-century. Relaxation time of the effects of recent volcanoes is generally shorter than those before the 1950s. For example, the recovery time of ocean heat content of Pinatubo, which caused comparable radiative forcing to Krakatau, seems to be much shorter. This is because Pinatubo happened under a warm and non-stationary background with increasing greenhouse gas forcing. However, its signal still could penetrate down to ~1000 m deep.
A 2022 study on environmental impacts of volcanic eruptions showed that in the eastern equatorial of the pacific, after the volcano erupts, some low-latitude volcano trends to warmer. But some highlatitude volcanoes tend to be colder.