Linking Upwelling Dynamics and Subsurface Nutrients to Projected Productivity Changes in the California Current System

Author:

Jacox Michael G.12ORCID,Bograd Steven J.1ORCID,Fiechter Jerome3,Pozo Buil Mercedes14,Alexander Michael2ORCID,Amaya Dillon2ORCID,Cordero Quiros Nathalí14ORCID,Ding Hui25ORCID,Rykaczewski Ryan R.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecosystem Science Division Southwest Fisheries Science Center National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Monterey CA USA

2. Physical Science Laboratory Earth System Research Laboratories National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Boulder CO USA

3. Ocean Sciences Department University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz CA USA

4. Institute of Marine Sciences University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz CA USA

5. University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

6. Ecosystem Sciences Division Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Honolulu HI USA

Abstract

AbstractGiven the importance of coastal upwelling systems to ocean productivity, fisheries, and biogeochemical cycles, their response to climate change is of great interest. However, there is no consensus on future productivity changes in these systems, which may be controlled by multiple drivers including wind‐driven and geostrophic transport, stratification, and source water properties. Here we use an ensemble of regional ocean projections and recently developed upwelling indices for the California Current System to disentangle these sometimes‐competing influences. Some changes are consistent among models (e.g., decreased mixed layer depth), while for others there is a lack of agreement even on the direction of future change (e.g., nitrate concentration in upwelled waters). Despite models' diverging projections of productivity changes, they agree that those changes are predominantly driven by subsurface nitrate concentrations, not by upwelling strength. Our results highlight the need for more attention to processes governing subsurface nutrient changes, not just upwelling strength.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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