Abstract

The Humboldt coastal upwelling system in the eastern South Pacific ocean is one of the most productive marine ecosystems in the world. A weakening of the upwelling activity could lead to severe ecological impacts. As coastal upwelling in eastern boundary systems is mainly driven by wind stress, most studies so far have analysed wind patterns change through the 20th and 21st Centuries in order to understand and project the phenomenon under specific forcing scenarios. Mixed results have been reported, and analyses from General Circulation Models have suggested even contradictory trends of wind stress for the Humboldt system. In this study, we analyse the ocean upwelling directly in 13 models contributing to phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) in both the historical simulations and an extreme climate change scenario (RCP8.5). The upwelling is represented by the upward ocean mass flux, a newly-included variable that represents the vertical water transport. Additionally, wind stress, ocean stratification, Ekman layer depth and thermocline depth were also analysed to explore their interactions with coastal upwelling throughout the period studied. The seasonal cycle of coastal upwelling differs between the Northern and Southern Humboldt areas. At lower latitudes, the upwelling season spans most of the autumn, winter and spring. However, in the Southern Humboldt area the upwelling season takes place in spring and the summertime with downwelling activity in winter. This persists throughout the Historical and RCP8.5 simulations. For both the Northern and Southern Humboldt areas an increasing wind stress is projected. However, different trends of upwelling intensity are observed away from the sea surface. Whereas wind stress will continue controlling the decadal variability of coastal upwelling on the whole ocean column analysed (surface to 300 m depth), an increasing disconnect with upwelling intensity is projected below 100 m depth throughout the 21st Century. This relates to an intensification of ocean stratification under global warming as shown by the sea water temperature profiles. Additionally, a divergence between the Ekman layer and thermocline depths is also evidenced. Given the interaction of upwelled nutrients and microscopic organisms essential for fish growth, a potential decline of coastal upwelling at depth could lead to unknown ecological and socio-economical effects.

Highlights

  • The eastern boundaries of the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans at subtropical latitudes encompass large areas of coastal upwelling (Sydeman et al 2014)

  • In addition to consequences on marine life and fishery at local or regional scales, changes in coastal upwelling patterns could lead to effects at global scale

  • Global food supply partially relies on fishery productivity in the major coastal upwelling systems (Fréon et al 2008; Brochier et al 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

The eastern boundaries of the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans at subtropical latitudes encompass large areas of coastal upwelling (Sydeman et al 2014). The offshore surface transport is replaced by water upwelled from depth (Neelin 2009) leading to the emergence of cold, nutrient-rich waters at the surface (Bakun 1990; Warwick and Marjorie 2001; Diffenbaugh et al 2003; Bakun et al 2010, 2015; Sydeman et al 2014) As these systems play a significant role for marine life and the fishing industry, variations of coastal upwelling intensity have direct ecological and economic impacts (Vecchi et al 2006; Bakun et al 2010; Sydeman et al 2014; Rykaczewski et al 2015).

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