Title
Impacts of Kelvin wave forcing in the Peru Humboldt Current system: Scenarios of spatial reorganizations from physics to fishers
Date Issued
01 October 2008
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
Because climate change challenges the sustainability of important fish populations and the fisheries they support, we need to understand how large scale climatic forcing affects the functioning of marine ecosystems. In the Humboldt Current system (HCS), a main driver of climatic variability is coastally-trapped Kelvin waves (KWs), themselves originating as oceanic equatorial KWs. Here we (i) describe the spatial reorganizations of living organisms in the Humboldt coastal system as affected by oceanic KWs forcing, (ii) quantify the strength of the interactions between the physical and biological component dynamics of the system, (iii) formulate hypotheses on the processes which drive the redistributions of the organisms, and (iv) build scenarios of space occupation in the HCS under varying KW forcing. To address these questions we explore, through bivariate lagged correlations and multivariate statistics, the relationships between time series of oceanic KW amplitude (TAO mooring data and model-resolved baroclinic modes) and coastal Peruvian oceanographic data (SST, coastal upwelled waters extent), anchoveta spatial distribution (mean distance to the coast, spatial concentration of the biomass, mean depth of the schools), and fishing fleet statistics (trip duration, searching duration, number of fishing sets and catch per trip, features of the foraging trajectory as observed by satellite vessel monitoring system). Data sets span all or part of January 1983 to September 2006. The results show that the effects of oceanic KW forcing are significant in all the components of the coastal ecosystem, from oceanography to the behaviour of the top predators - fishers. This result provides evidence for a bottom-up transfer of the behaviours and spatial stucturing through the ecosystem. We propose that contrasting scenarios develop during the passage of upwelling versus downwelling KWs. From a predictive point of view, we show that KW amplitudes observed in the mid-Pacific can be used to forecast which system state will dominate the HCS over the next 2-6 months. Such predictions should be integrated in the Peruvian adaptive fishery management. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Start page
278
End page
289
Volume
79
Issue
April 2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-56749178647
Source
Progress in Oceanography
ISSN of the container
00796611
Sponsor(s)
The authors strongly thank the Instituto del Mar del Peru (IMARPE) for having facilitated the use of the data for this work and the SODA team for making available the assimilation products that were used in this study. TAO data Project Office (NOAA/Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory 7600 Sand Point Way NE Seattle, WA 98115) is also acknowledged for making available on their website ( http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/tao/data_deliv/deliv.html ) the D20 depth data. We are also very grateful to Matthieu Lengaigne (IRD – LOCEAN laboratory) for his help in analysing and interpreting these TAO data and for fruitful conversations on this paper. This work is a contribution of the UR 097 ‘ECO-UP’, the UMR ‘LEGOS’ and the Interdepartmental Thematic Action “Humboldt Current System” from IRD. This work was supported in part by the US National Science Foundation in a grant number NSF0526392 to one of the investigators (Sophie Bertrand).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus