Tracking the Surface Circulation in Coastal Upwelling off Central and Northern California over Long Times and Large Areas.
Abstract
More than a decade of HF Radar data off central and northern California provides an unprecedented view of the flow structures and interannual variability in surface circulation in a coastal upwelling area. The interaction of the alongshore shelf jet with shoreline features and mesoscale eddies is well represented in direct analyses of HFR data and also important in improving the performance of data-assimilating models. While invaluable for operational response in the short-term, this long-term record of surface circulation is equally invaluable in ecosystem oceanography. With direct measurement of currents, the different expressions of upwelling can be disaggregated. Wind forcing, transport patterns and water properties can be evaluated independently and indexed independently. In doing this, it becomes clear that wind-current-temperature correlations change from place to place and year to year in any given region and that a single "upwelling index" is a blunt tool to track changes in pelagic and benthic communities in coastal upwelling areas.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFMOS13B1819L
- Keywords:
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- 4217 Coastal processes;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERALDE: 4262 Ocean observing systems;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERALDE: 4294 Instruments and techniques;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERALDE: 4512 Currents;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL