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Indian Ocean warming as a potential trigger for super phytoplankton blooms in the eastern equatorial Pacific from El Niño to La Niña transitions

Feng Tian, Rong‐Hua Zhang, Xiujun Wang

2021Environmental Research Letters18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract During El Niño to La Niña transitions in 1998 and 2010, satellite observations revealed a sharp increase in surface chlorophyll in the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP), exceeding the interannual amplitude by threefold; however, the causes of such super phytoplankton blooms (SPBs) remain unclear. Here, observational data, climate model simulations, and coupled ocean-biogeochemical modeling experiments are adopted to show that Indian Ocean (IO) warming plays an active role in remotely triggering SPBs in the EEP. During the previous boreal winter in an El Niño year, IO warming generates anomalous easterlies over the western edge of the tropical Pacific, which excite upwelling Kelvin waves propagating into the EEP during the following boreal spring, remotely causing an uplift of the nutricline in the EEP. Seasonally, the mixed layer deepens and the upper ocean warms during the following late spring, and large amounts of nutrient-rich cold subsurface waters entrain into the mixed layer; interannually, the local grazing pressure is low after the peak of El Niño. These remote and local factors jointly promote SPBs in the EEP.

Topics & Concepts

UpwellingOceanographyBiogeochemical cyclePhytoplanktonBorealEnvironmental scienceAlgal bloomClimatologyMixed layerLa NiñaGeologyAtmospheric sciencesNutrientEl Niño Southern OscillationPaleontologyChemistryOrganic chemistryEnvironmental chemistryMarine and coastal ecosystemsOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesClimate variability and models
Indian Ocean warming as a potential trigger for super phytoplankton blooms in the eastern equatorial Pacific from El Niño to La Niña transitions | Litcius