Publications

Jamil, AL; Kavanaugh, MT; Spitz, YH (2023). Drivers of Physical and Biological Frontal Variability in the Northern California Current System. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 128(6), e2022JC019408.

Abstract
Oceanic fronts mark the boundary between two water masses and are often sites of complex bio-physical processes and multi-trophic level interactions, making them particularly important features in marine ecosystems. As global climate change induces multi-scale shifts in the driving physical mechanisms of fronts, spatiotemporal tracking of frontal variability can aid in efforts to understand the downstream effects on marine biodiversity and ecosystem structure. Here we focus on fronts within the dynamic northern extent of the California Current System (NCC). We derived mesoscale sea surface temperature (SST) and chlorophyll-a (chl-a) fronts across the NCC region from 4-km MODIS-Aqua L3 daily fields over 2003-2019. Mesoscale physical (SST) and biological (chl-a) fronts were often adjacent and coherent in their seasonal and interannual occurrence frequencies, but were spatially decoupled. SST fronts were most frequent and broadly distributed offshore while chl-a fronts mostly occurred along the continental shelf break, particularly from Vancouver Island to central Oregon. Additionally, we employed a standardized multiple linear regression analysis to quantify the relative influence of local- and basin-scale processes on frontal variability in the NCC. Local wind stress and wind stress curl variability were the most influential drivers of fronts over the shelf, while basin-scale climate variability (i.e., climate oscillations) significantly drove frontal occurrences along the shelf break and offshore. Given predictions in the intensification of coastal upwelling in systems such as the NCC, our results indicate that oceanic response to climate change driven atmospheric variability will significantly impact the NCC marine ecosystem on the mesoscale.

DOI:
10.1029/2022JC019408

ISSN:
2169-9291