4.7 Article

State of the California Current 2019-2020: Back to the Future With Marine Heatwaves?

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.709454

Keywords

California Current; marine heat wave; upwelling; anchovy; Ecosystem Assessment; CalCOFI

Funding

  1. NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center
  2. National Science Foundation as part of the California Current Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research site [OCE1637632]
  3. U.S. Navy Pacific Fleet [NAVFAC/CESU N624731920028]
  4. NOAA [NA15OAR4320071, NA16NOS012022]
  5. U.S. Bureau of Land Management [L10AC20449, L12AC20629, L17AC00276]
  6. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [10154BJ101]
  7. Bently Foundation
  8. Elinor Patterson Baker Trust
  9. Marisla Foundation
  10. Giles W. and Elise G. Mead Foundation
  11. Frank A. CampiniFoundation
  12. Bernice Barbour Foundation
  13. Kimball Foundation
  14. RHE Charitable Foundation
  15. Volgenau Foundation

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The California Current System has experienced significant fluctuations in environmental conditions in recent years, impacting the biological community. The formation of a marine heatwave in 2019 and strong coastal upwelling in early 2020 created relatively productive conditions in the northern CCS, while ocean temperatures remained above average in the southern CCS. The community dynamics at different trophic levels were controlled by coastal upwelling in the north and a long-term warming trend in the south, rather than the marine heatwave itself.
The California Current System (CCS) has experienced large fluctuations in environmental conditions in recent years that have dramatically affected the biological community. Here we synthesize remotely sensed, hydrographic, and biological survey data from throughout the CCS in 2019-2020 to evaluate how recent changes in environmental conditions have affected community dynamics at multiple trophic levels. A marine heatwave formed in the north Pacific in 2019 and reached the second greatest area ever recorded by the end of summer 2020. However, high atmospheric pressure in early 2020 drove relatively strong Ekman-driven coastal upwelling in the northern portion of the CCS and warm temperature anomalies remained far offshore. Upwelling and cooler temperatures in the northern CCS created relatively productive conditions in which the biomass of lipid-rich copepod species increased, adult krill size increased, and several seabird species experienced positive reproductive success. Despite these conditions, the composition of the fish community in the northern CCS remained a mixture of both warm- and cool-water-associated species. In the southern CCS, ocean temperatures remained above average for the seventh consecutive year. Abundances of juvenile fish species associated with productive conditions were relatively low, and the ichthyoplankton community was dominated by a mixture of oceanic warm-water and cosmopolitan species. Seabird species associated with warm water also occurred at greater densities than cool-water species in the southern CCS. The population of northern anchovy, which has been resurgent since 2017, continued to provide an important forage base for piscivorous fishes, offshore colonies of seabirds, and marine mammals throughout the CCS. Coastal upwelling in the north, and a longer-term trend in warming in the south, appeared to be controlling the community to a much greater extent than the marine heatwave itself.

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