Comparisons of chlorophyll variability between the four major global eastern boundary currents |
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Authors: | Andrew C Thomas Corresponding author P Ted Strub Mary Elena Carr Ryan Weatherbee |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Marine Sciences , University of Maine , Orono, Maine 04469-5741, USA;2. College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences , Oregon State University , Corvallis, Oregon 97331-5503, USA;3. Jet Propulsion Laboratory , California Institute of Technology , MS 300-323, 4800 Oak Grove Dr., Pasadena, CA 91009-8099, USA |
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Abstract: | The first two years of SeaWiFS (Sea viewing Wide Field of view Sensor) data (1997–1999) are used to document the variability of large-scale surface chlorophyll patterns within the coastal region along the full latitudinal extent of each of the four major global eastern boundary currents; the California, Humboldt, Benguela and Canary Currents. Seasonal chlorophyll patterns are compared to coincident seasonal cycles of Ekman transport calculated from satellite scatterometer data. In all four regions, maximum chlorophyll concentrations are generally temporally and latitudinally coincident with the seasonal maximum in upwelling (offshore Ekman transport) over most of their latitudinal range, but exceptions are documented. Interannual differences are evident in each region, most notably in the two Pacific regions where the 1997–1998 chlorophyll seasonality was affected by El Niño conditions. Significant differences between previously published chlorophyll seasonality deduced from the relatively sparse coverage of the Coastal Zone Color Scanner (CZCS) and the more complete coverage of SeaWiFS in both Southern Hemisphere regions are evident. |
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