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Satellite views of Pacific chlorophyll variability: comparisons to physical variability, local versus nonlocal influences and links to climate indices

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Title Satellite views of Pacific chlorophyll variability: comparisons to physical variability, local versus nonlocal influences and links to climate indices
Names Thomas, Andrew C. (creator)
Strub, P. Ted (creator)
Weatherbee, Ryan A. (creator)
James, Corinne (creator)
Date Issued 2012-11-15 (iso8601)
Note This is the author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/deep-sea-research-part-ii-topical-studies-in-oceanography/.
Abstract Concurrent satellite-measured chlorophyll (CHL), sea surface temperature (SST), sea level
anomaly (SLA) and model-derived wind vectors from the 13+ year SeaWiFS period September
1997 – December 2010 quantify time and space patterns of phytoplankton variability and its
links to physical forcing in the Pacific Ocean. The CHL fields are a metric of biological
variability, SST represents vertical mixing and motion, often an indicator of nutrient availability
in the upper ocean, SLA is a proxy for pycnocline depths and surface currents while vector
winds represent surface forcing by the atmosphere and vertical motions driven by Ekman
pumping. Dominant modes of variability are determined using empirical orthogonal functions
(EOFs) applied to a nested set of domains for comparison: over the whole basin, over the
equatorial corridor, over individual hemispheres at extra-tropical latitudes (>20°) and over
eastern boundary current (EBC) upwelling regions. Strong symmetry exists between
hemispheres and the EBC regions, both in seasonal and non-seasonal variability. Seasonal
variability is strongest at mid latitudes but non-seasonal variability, our primary focus, is
strongest along the equatorial corridor. Non-seasonal basin-scale variability is highly correlated
with equatorial signals and the strongest signal across all regions in the study period is associated
with the 1997-1999 ENSO cycle. Results quantify the magnitude and geographic pattern with
which dominant basin-scale signals are expressed in extra-tropical regions and the EBC
upwelling areas, stronger in the Humboldt Current than in the California Current. In both EBC
regions, wind forcing has weaker connections to non-seasonal CHL variability than SST and
SLA, especially at mid and lower latitudes. Satellite-derived dominant physical and biological
patterns over the basin and each sub-region are compared to indices that track aspects of climate
variability in the Pacific (the MEI, PDO and NPGO). We map and compare the local CHL
footprint associated with each index and those of local wind stress curl, showing the dominance
in most areas of the MEI and its similarity to the PDO. Principal estimator patterns quantify the
linkage between dominant modes of forcing variability (wind, SLA and SST) and CHL response,
comparing local interactions within EBC regions with those imposed by equatorial signals and
mapping equatorial forcing on extra-tropical CHL variability.
Genre Article
Topic Pacific
Identifier Thomas, A., Strub, P., Weatherbee, R., & James, C. (2012). Satellite views of pacific chlorophyll variability: Comparisons to physical variability, local versus nonlocal influences and links to climate indices. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 77-80, 99-116. doi: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2012.04.008

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