More Than Marine Heatwaves: A New Regime of Heat, Acidity, and Low Oxygen Compound Extreme Events in the Gulf of Alaska

Author:

Hauri Claudine1ORCID,Pagès Rémi1ORCID,Hedstrom Katherine2,Doney Scott C.3ORCID,Dupont Sam4,Ferriss Bridget5,Stuecker Malte F.6

Affiliation:

1. International Arctic Research Center University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks AK USA

2. College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks AK USA

3. Department of Environmental Sciences University of Virginia Charlottesville VA USA

4. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Gothenburg Fiskebäckskil Sweden

5. Resource Ecology and Fisheries Management Division Alaska Fisheries Science Center NOAA Fisheries Seattle WA USA

6. Department of Oceanography International Pacific Research Center School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Honolulu HI USA

Abstract

AbstractRecent marine heatwaves in the Gulf of Alaska have had devastating impacts on species from various trophic levels. Due to climate change, total heat exposure in the upper ocean has become longer, more intense, more frequent, and more likely to happen at the same time as other environmental extremes. The combination of multiple environmental extremes can exacerbate the response of sensitive marine organisms. Our hindcast simulation provides the first indication that more than 20% of the bottom water of the Gulf of Alaska continental shelf was exposed to quadruple heat, positive hydrogen ion concentration [H+], negative aragonite saturation state (Ωarag), and negative oxygen concentration [O2] compound extreme events during the 2018–2020 marine heat wave. Natural intrusion of deep and acidified water combined with the marine heat wave triggered the first occurrence of these events in 2019. During the 2013–2016 marine heat wave, surface waters were already exposed to widespread marine heat and positive [H+] compound extreme events due to the temperature effect on the [H+]. We introduce a new Gulf of Alaska Downwelling Index (GOADI) with short‐term predictive skill, which can serve as indicator of past and near‐future positive [H+], negative Ωarag, and negative [O2] compound extreme events near the shelf seafloor. Our results suggest that the marine heat waves may have not been the sole environmental stressor that led to the observed ecosystem impacts and warrant a closer look at existing in situ inorganic carbon and other environmental data in combination with biological observations and model output.

Funder

North Pacific Research Board

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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