Record Details

Seasonal and interannual variability of satellite-derived chlorophyll pigment, surface height, and temperature off Baja California

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Field Value
Title Seasonal and interannual variability of satellite-derived chlorophyll pigment, surface height, and temperature off Baja California
Names Espinosa-Carreon, T. Leticia (creator)
Strub, P. Ted (creator)
Beier, Emilio (creator)
Ocampo-Torres, Francisco (creator)
Gaxiola-Castro, Gilberto (creator)
Date Issued 2004 (iso8601)
Note Copyright 2004 by the American Geophysical Union
Abstract Mean fields, seasonal cycles, and interannual variability are examined for fields of
satellite-derived chlorophyll pigment concentrations (CHL), sea surface height (SSH), and
sea surface temperature (SST) during 1997–2002. The analyses help to identify three
dynamic regions: an upwelling zone next to the coast, the Ensenada Front in the north,
and regions of repeated meanders and/or eddy variability west and southwest of Point
Eugenia. High values of CHL are found in the upwelling zone, diminishing offshore. The
exception is the area north of 31°N (the Ensenada Front), where higher CHL are found
about 150 km offshore. South of 31°N, the long-term mean dynamic topography decreases
next to the coast, creating isopleths of height parallel to the coastline, consistent with
southward geostrophic flow. North of 31°N the mean flow is toward the east, consistent
with the presence of the Ensenada Front. The mean SST reveals a more north-south
gradient, reflecting latitudinal differences in surface heating due to solar radiation.
Harmonic analyses and EOFs reveal the seasonal and interannual patterns, including the
region of repeated eddy activity to the west and southwest of Point Eugenia. A maximum
CHL occurs in spring in most of the inshore regions, reflecting the growth of
phytoplankton in response to the seasonal maximum in upwelling-favorable winds. SST
and SSH anomalies are negative in the coastal upwelling zone in spring, also consistent
with a response to the seasonal maximum in upwelling. When the seasonal cycle is
removed, the strongest signal in the EOF time series is the response to the strong 1997–
1998 El Niño, with a weaker signal representing La Niña (1998–1999) conditions.
El Niño conditions consist of low chlorophyll, high SSH, and high SST, with opposite
conditions during La Niña.
Genre Article
Identifier Espinosa-Carreon, T. L., P. T. Strub, E. Beier, F. Ocampo-Torres, and G. Gaxiola-Castro (2004), Seasonal and interannual variability of satellite-derived chlorophyll pigment, surface height, and temperature off Baja California, J. Geophys. Res., 109, C03039, doi:10.1029/2003JC002105.

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