4.5 Article

Biogeography and phenology of satellite-measured phytoplankton seasonality in the California current

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr.2014.06.008

Keywords

Eastern boundary current; Phytoplankton; Remote sensing; Food webs, structure and dynamics; Chlorophyll; Clustering analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF [OCE-0815051, OCE-0814413]
  2. NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship [NNX12AP26H]
  3. Division Of Ocean Sciences
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [0815051] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. NASA [13271, NNX12AP26H] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Thirteen years (1998-2010) of satellite-measured chlorophyll a are used to establish spatial patterns in climatological phytoplankton biomass seasonality across the California Current System (CCS) and its interannual variability. Multivariate clustering based on the shape of the local climatological seasonal cycle divides the study area into four groups: two with spring-summer maxima representing the northern and southern coastal upwelling zones, one with a summer minimum offshore in mid-latitudes and a fourth with very weak seasonality in between. Multivariate clustering on the seasonal cycles from all 13 years produces the same four seasonal cycle types and provides a view of the interannual variability in seasonal biogeography. Over the study period these seasonal cycles generally appear in similar locations as the climatological clusters. However, considerable interannual variability in the geography of the seasonal cycles is evident across the CCS, the most spatially extensive of which are associated with the 1997-1999 El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) signal and the 2005 delayed spring transition off the Oregon and northern and central California coasts. We quantify linear trends over the study period in the seasonal timing of the two seasonal cycles that represent the biologically productive coastal upwelling zones using four different metrics of phenology. In the northern upwelling region, the date of the spring maximum is delaying (1.34 days yr(-1)) and the central tendency of the summer elevated chlorophyll period is advancing (0.63 days yr(-1)). In the southern coastal upwelling region, both the initiation and cessation of the spring maximum are delaying (1.78 days yr(-1) and 2.44 days yr(-1), respectively) and the peak is increasing in duration over the study period. Connections between observed interannual shifts in phytoplankton seasonality and physical forcing, expressed as either basin-scale climate signals or local forcing, show phytoplankton seasonality in the CCS to be influenced by changes in the seasonality of the wind mixing power offshore, coastal upwelling in the near-shore regions and basin-scale signals such as ENSO across the study area. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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