Interannual monsoon wind variability as a key driver of East African small pelagic fisheries

Author:

Jebri Fatma,Jacobs Zoe L.,Raitsos Dionysios E.,Srokosz Meric,Painter Stuart C.,Kelly Stephen,Roberts Michael J.,Scott Lucy,Taylor Sarah F. W.,Palmer Matthew,Kizenga Hellen,Shaghude Yohana,Wihsgott Juliane,Popova Ekaterina

Abstract

AbstractSmall pelagic fisheries provide food security, livelihood support and economic stability for East African coastal communities—a region of least developed countries. Using remotely- sensed and field observations together with modelling, we address the biophysical drivers of this important resource. We show that annual variations of fisheries yield parallel those of chlorophyll-a (an index of phytoplankton biomass). While enhanced phytoplankton biomass during the Northeast monsoon is triggered by wind-driven upwelling, during the Southeast monsoon, it is driven by two current induced mechanisms: coastal “dynamic uplift” upwelling; and westward advection of nutrients. This biological response to the Southeast monsoon is greater than that to the Northeast monsoon. For years unaffected by strong El-Niño/La-Niña events, the Southeast monsoon wind strength over the south tropical Indian Ocean is the main driver of year-to-year variability. This has important implications for the predictability of fisheries yield, its response to climate change, policy and resource management.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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