Record Details

Iron links river runoff and shelf width to phytoplankton biomass along the U.S. West Coast

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Field Value
Title Iron links river runoff and shelf width to phytoplankton biomass along the U.S. West Coast
Names Chase, Zanna (creator)
Strutton, Peter G. (creator)
Hales, Burke (creator)
Date Issued 2007-04-28 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract A poleward increase in phytoplankton biomass along
the West Coast of North America has been attributed to
increasing river runoff towards the north. We combine
streamflow and shelf width data with satellite-derived
estimates of phytoplankton biomass to quantify the
relationship between these variables. We find that a
combination of winter streamflow and shelf width can
account for over 80% of the spatial variance in summer
chlorophyll within 50 km of the coast. At a given
location, interannual variability in streamflow is not
associated with interannual variability in chlorophyll.
We attribute these relationships to the role of rivers as
suppliers of the micronutrient iron, and the role of the
shelf as a ‘capacitor’ for riverine iron, charging during
the high-flow winter season and discharging during the
upwelling season. Data from the Oregon shelf confirm
that, during winter, a significant fraction of riverine iron
escapes the estuary and reaches the coastal ocean.
Genre Article
Topic runoff
Identifier Chase , Z., P. G. Strutton, and B. Hales (2007), Iron links river runoff and shelf width to phytoplankton biomass along the U.S. West Coast, Geophys. Res. Lett., 34, L04607

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