Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests that mesoscale eddies have a strong influence on the distribution and behavior of zooplankton and micronekton. However, the mechanisms driving their responses to mesoscale eddies are not yet fully understood, largely due to the low resolution of previous observations. Underwater gliders equipped with acoustic equipment and environmental sensors provide an ideal means to obtain observations with high temporal and spatial resolutions. In this study, two underwater gliders were used to record environmental parameters and acoustic intensities across an anticyclonic eddy in the oligotrophic western North Pacific subtropical gyre in September 2019. Based on the variations in the sea surface current and sea surface height anomaly (SSHA) along the underwater glider tracks, the study area was divided into three subregions: eddy core (SSHA >27 cm), eddy periphery (27 cm > SSHA >20 cm), and ambient water (SSHA <20 cm). More intense backscattering occurred in the upper 800 m of the eddy core with mean area backscattering coefficient values that were 35.8% higher than those of the eddy periphery and 19.8% higher than those of the ambient water. The convergence associated with the eddy could explain that the largest animal congregations occurred in the upper 100 m of the eddy core at night. Downwelling of warmer and oxygen-rich water in the eddy core induced animals to accumulate toward the deep of the eddy core, while migrating downwards during the day. Both these results and the lack of spatial heterogeneity of chlorophyll -a in and around the anticyclonic eddy indicated that horizontal and vertical distributions of zooplankton and micronekton in the anticyclonic eddy in the oligotrophic ocean were less related to spatial variations in the phytoplankton, but might be associated with the combined effect of the physical process in the anticyclonic eddy and the diel vertical migration behavior of animals. Our results suggest that anticyclonic eddies can dynamically modulate the spatial distribution of biomass, leading to the formation of mesopelagic biomass hotspots in the oligotrophic oceans and strongly affecting the ecology and behaviors of top predators that prey on small animals. • Spatial heterogeneity in biomass distribution was observed in an anticyclonic eddy. • Redistribution of biomass occurs within anticyclonic eddies. • Anticyclonic eddies in oligotrophic oceans support mesopelagic biomass hotspots.

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