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Deep convection is an essential part of the circulation in the North Atlantic Ocean. It influences the northward heat transport achieved by the thermohaline circulation. Understanding its stability and variability is therefore necessary for assessing climatic changes in the area of the North Atlantic. This thesis aims at improving the conceptual understanding of the stability and variability of deep convection. Observational data from the Labrador Sea show phases with and without deep convection. A simple two-box model is fitted to these data. The results suggest that the Labrador Sea has two coexisting stable states, one with regular deep convection and one without deep convection. This bistability arises from a positive salinity feedback that is due to the net freshwater input into the surface layer. The convecting state can easily become unstable if the mean forcing shifts to warmer or less saline conditions. The weather-induced variability of the external forcing is included into the box model by adding a stochastic forcing term. It turns out that deep convection is then switched "on" and "off" frequently. The mean residence time in either state is a measure of its stochastic stability. The stochastic stability depends smoothly on the forcing parameters, in contrast to the deterministic (non-stochastic) stability which may change abruptly. The mean and the variance of the stochastic forcing both have an impact on the frequency of deep convection. For instance, a decline in convection frequency due to a surface freshening may be compensated for by an increased heat flux variability. With a further simplified box model some stochastic stability features are studied analytically. A new effect is described, called wandering monostability: even if deep convection is not a stable state due to changed forcing parameters, the stochastic forcing can still trigger convection events frequently. The analytical expressions explicitly show how wandering monostability and other effects depend on the model parameters. This dependence is always exponential for the mean residence times, but for the probability of long nonconvecting phases it is exponential only if this probability is small. It is to be expected that wandering monostability is relevant in other parts of the climate system as well. All in all, the results demonstrate that the stability of deep convection in the Labrador Sea reacts very sensitively to the forcing. The presence of variability is crucial for understanding this sensitivity. Small changes in the forcing can already significantly lower the frequency of deep convection events, which presumably strongly affects the regional climate. ----Anmerkung: Der Autor ist Träger des durch die Physikalische Gesellschaft zu Berlin vergebenen Carl-Ramsauer-Preises 2003 für die jeweils beste Dissertation der vier Universitäten Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Technische Universität Berlin und Universität Potsdam.