1. Delayed upwelling alters nearshore coastal ocean ecosystems in the northern California current.
- Author
-
Barth, John A., Menge, Bruce A., Lubchenco, Jane, Chan, Francis, Bane, John M., Kirincich, Anthony R., McManus, Margaret A., Nielsen, Karina J., Stephen D. Pierce, and Washburn, Libe
- Subjects
UPWELLING (Oceanography) ,OCEAN circulation ,MARINE productivity ,GLOBAL warming ,MARINE ecology ,GLOBAL temperature changes - Abstract
Wind-driven coastal ocean upwelling supplies nutrients to the euphotic zone near the coast. Nutrients fuel the growth of phytoplankton, the base of a very productive coastal marine ecosystem [Pauly D, Christensen V (1995) Nature 374:255-257]. Because nutrient supply and phytoplankton biomass in shelf waters are highly sensitive to variation in upwelling-driven circulation, shifts in the timing and strength of upwelling may alter basic nutrient and carbon fluxes through marine food webs. We show how a 1-month delay in the 2005 spring transition to upwelling-favorable wind stress in the northern California Current Large Marine Ecosystem resulted in numerous anomalies: warm water, low nutrient levels, low primary productivity, and an unprecedented low recruitment of rocky intertidal organisms. The delay was associated with 20- to 40-day wind oscillations accompanying a southward shift of the jet stream. Early in the upwelling season (May-July) off Oregon, the cumulative upwelling-favorable wind stress was the lowest in 20 years, nearshore surface waters averaged 2°C warmer than normal, surf-zone chlorophyll-a and nutrients were 50% and 30% less than normal, respectively, and densities of recruits of mussels and barnacles were reduced by 83% and 66%, respectively. Delayed early-season upwelling and stronger late-season upwelling are consistent with predictions of the influence of global warming on coastal upwelling regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF