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State of the California Current 2014-15: Impacts of the Warm-Water "Blob"

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Title State of the California Current 2014-15: Impacts of the Warm-Water "Blob"
Names Leising, Andrew W. (creator)
Schroeder, Isaac D. (creator)
Bograd, Steven J. (creator)
Abell, Jeffrey (creator)
Durazo, Reginaldo (creator)
Gaxiola-Castro, Gilberto (creator)
Bjorkstedt, Eric P. (creator)
Field, John (creator)
Sakuma, Keith (creator)
Robertson, Roxanne R. (creator)
Goericke, Ralf (creator)
Peterson, William T. (creator)
Brodeur, Ric (creator)
Barceló, Caren (creator)
Auth, Toby D. (creator)
Daly, Elizabeth A. (creator)
Suryan, Robert M. (creator)
Gladics, Amanda J. (creator)
Porquez, Jessica M. (creator)
McClatchie, Sam (creator)
Weber, Edward D. (creator)
Watson, William (creator)
Santora, Jarrod A. (creator)
Sydeman, William J. (creator)
Melin, Sharon R. (creator)
Chavez, Francisco P. (creator)
Golightly, Richard T. (creator)
Schneider, Stephanie R. (creator)
Fisher, Jennifer (creator)
Morgan, Cheryl (creator)
Bradley, Russell (creator)
Warybok, Peter (creator)
Date Issued 2015 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Scripps Institution of Oceanography and can be found at: http://calcofi.org/ccpublications/ccreports/calcofi-reports-pdf.html
Abstract In 2014, the California Current (~28˚–48˚N) saw
average, or below average, coastal upwelling and relatively
low productivity in most locations, except from
38˚–43˚N during June and July. Chlorophyll-a levels
were low throughout spring and summer at most locations,
except in a small region around 39˚N. Catches
of juvenile rockfish (an indicator of upwelling-related
fish species) remained high throughout the area surveyed
(32˚–43˚N). In the fall of 2014, as upwelling
ceased, many locations saw an unprecedented increase
in sea surface temperatures (anomalies as large as 4˚C),
particularly at 45˚N due to the coastal intrusion of
an extremely anomalous pool of warm water. This
warm surface anomaly had been building offshore in
the Gulf of Alaska since the fall of 2013, and has been
referred to as the “blob.” Values of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation index (PDO) continued to climb during
2014, indicative of the increase in warm coastal surface
waters, whereas the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation
index (NPGO) saw a slight rebound to more
neutral values (indicative of average productivity levels)
during 2014. During spring 2015, the upwelling
index was slightly higher than average for locations in
the central and northern region, but remained below
average at latitudes south of 35˚N. Chlorophyll a levels
were slightly higher than average in ~0.5˚ latitude
patches north of 35˚N, whereas productivity and phytoplankton
biomass were low south of Pt. Conception.
Catches of rockfish remained high along most of
the coast, however, market squid remained high only within the central coast (36˚–38˚N), and euphausiid
abundance decreased everywhere, as compared to the
previous year. Sardine and anchovy were nearly absent
from the southern portion of the California Current
system (CCS), whereas their larvae were found off the
coast of Oregon and Washington during winter for the
first time in many years. Waters warmed dramatically
in the southern California region due to a change in
wind patterns similar to that giving rise to the blob in
the broader northeast Pacific. For most of the coast,
there were intrusions of species never found before or
found at much higher abundances than usual, including
fish, crustaceans, tunicates and other gelatinous zooplankton,
along with other species often indicative of
an El Niño. Thus species richness was high in many
areas given the close juxtaposition of coastal upwelling-related
species with the offshore warm-water intrusive
or El Niño-typical taxa. Thus the California Current
by 2015 appears to have transitioned to a very different
state than previous observations.
Genre Article
Identifier Leising, A. W., Schroeder, I. D., Bograd, S. J., Abell, J., Durazo, R., ... & Warybok, P. (2015). State of the California Current 2014-15: Impacts of the Warm-Water "Blob". California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations Reports, 56, 31-68.

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