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Advances in Marine Ecosystem Dynamics from US GLOBEC: The Horizontal-Advection Bottom-up Forcing Paradigm

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Title Advances in Marine Ecosystem Dynamics from US GLOBEC: The Horizontal-Advection Bottom-up Forcing Paradigm
Names Di Lorenzo, Emanuele (creator)
Mountain, David (creator)
Batchelder, Harold P. (creator)
Bond, Nicholas (creator)
Hofmann, Eileen E. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-12 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Oceanography Society and can be found at: http://www.tos.org/oceanography/index.html.
Abstract A primary focus of the US Global Ocean Ecosystem Dynamics
(GLOBEC) program was to identify the mechanisms of ecosystem response to large-scale
climate forcing under the assumption that bottom-up forcing controls a large
fraction of marine ecosystem variability. At the beginning of GLOBEC, the prevailing
bottom-up forcing hypothesis was that climate-induced changes in vertical transport
modulated nutrient supply and surface primary productivity, which in turn affected
the lower trophic levels (e.g., zooplankton) and higher trophic levels (e.g., fish)
through the trophic cascade. Although upwelling dynamics were confirmed to be
an important driver of ecosystem variability in GLOBEC studies, the use of eddy-resolving
regional-scale ocean circulation models combined with field observations
revealed that horizontal advection is an equally important driver of marine ecosystem
variability. Through a synthesis of studies from the four US GLOBEC regions
(Gulf of Alaska, Northern California Current, Northwest Atlantic, and Southern
Ocean), a new horizontal-advection bottom-up forcing paradigm emerges in which
large-scale climate forcing drives regional changes in alongshore and cross-shelf
ocean transport that directly impact ecosystem functions (e.g., productivity, species
composition, spatial connectivity). The horizontal advection bottom-up forcing
paradigm expands the mechanistic pathways through which climate variability and
climate change impact the marine ecosystem. In particular, these results highlight
the need for future studies to resolve and understand the role of mesoscale and
submesoscale transport processes and their relationship to climate.
Genre Article
Identifier Di Lorenzo, E., D. Mountain, H.P. Batchelder, N. Bond, and E.E. Hofmann. 2013. Advances in marine ecosystem dynamics from US GLOBEC: The horizontal-advection bottom-up forcing paradigm. Oceanography 26(4):22–33. doi:10.5670/oceanog.2013.73

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