Abstract
Climate variability and climate change in Eastern Boundary Upwelling Systems (EBUS) affect global marine ecosystems services. We use passive tracers in a global ocean model hindcast at eddy-permitting resolution to diagnose EBUS low-frequency variability over 1958–2015 period. The results highlight the uniqueness of each EBUS in terms of drivers and climate variability. The wind forcing and the thermocline depth, which are potentially competitive or complementary upwelling drivers under climate change, control EBUS low-frequency variability with different contributions. Moreover, Atlantic and Pacific upwelling systems are independent. In the Pacific, the only coherent variability between California and Humboldt Systems is associated with El Niño Southern Oscillation. The remaining low-frequency variance is partially explained by the North and South Pacific expressions of the Meridional Modes. In the Atlantic, coherent variability between Canary and Benguela Systems is associated with upwelling trends, which are not dynamically linked and represent different processes. In the Canary, a negative upwelling trend is connected to the Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation, while in the Benguela, a positive upwelling trend is forced by a global sea level pressure trend, which is consistent with the climate response to anthropogenic forcing. The residual variability is forced by localized offshore high sea level pressure variability.
Introduction
The Eastern Boundary Upwelling Systems (EBUS), such as the California Current System (CalCS), the Canary Current System (CanCS), the Humboldt Current System (HCS), and the Benguela Current System (BenCS), are among the most productive marine ecosystems, supplying up to 20% of the global fish catches, although they only cover approximately 1% of the total ocean1,2,3. Surface alongshore winds, together with the Coriolis effect, force the offshore water transport and the divergence of the surface flow, through Ekman Transport and Ekman suction, respectively, thereby lifting nutrient-rich deep waters into the euphotic layer. The nutrient-rich upwelled water, in addition to the sunlight, sustains the blooms of phytoplankton that are the foundation of the aquatic food web2,4. Recent studies have documented trends3,5,6 and decadal scale changes in the EBUS ecosystem structure7,8. Thus, understanding the low-frequency drivers and monitoring changes across EBUS is important. Bakun (1990) hypothesized an increase in upwelling-favourable winds (e.g. equatorward alongshore winds) due to the intensification of the continental-oceanic pressure gradient under global warming9. A more recent hypothesis suggests an alternative mechanism, whereby a poleward shift of the oceanic high-pressure system would stimulate latitude-dependent changes in the magnitude and timing of the upwelling winds6,10. Many studies demonstrate that the upwelling-favourable winds over EBUS intensify2,3,9,11,12,13 both in the past records and in the future projections although the driving mechanism is still debated, and conflicting results have been reported. Narayan et al. (2010) depicted decreasing trends for California14; Dewitte et al. (2012) and Tim et al. (2015) reported no significant trends in the Peru and Benguela systems5,15 and Pardo et al. (2011) and Sydeman et al. (2014a) showed a decreasing upwelling in the Canary systems, particularly along the Iberian coast3,16. As Garcia-Reyes et al. (2015) discussed in details in their review paper2, this lack of agreement about the future changes of the upwelling-favourable winds associated with the expected coastal warming makes any assessment of future of coastal temperatures and biogeochemistry challenging3,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25. Coastal warming increases the water stratification and it can limit the effectiveness of upwelling to bring nutrient-rich deep waters up to the euphotic zone2,26,27. Increasing or decreasing of the upwelling-favourable winds can also mitigate or amplify the action of coastal warming. Therefore, the future changes in upwelling-favourable winds and stratification can be either complementary or competitive. Moreover, coastal trapped waves may also influence the water column stratification28,29, modulating coastal biogeochemical conditions30 and triggering vertical displacements of the thermocline31, which controls subsurface anomalies (e.g., salinity) and thus the impact on EBUS productivity32,33. The dataset used, the temporal coverage, and the upwelling index variable significantly influence the trend analysis results2,3,34.
From a broader climatic perspective, the evaluation of long-term trends from observations and model experiments is potentially complicated by climate modes, which likely exert some control on the upwelling low-frequency variability2,4,13,34. Many of the most significant upwelling modifications in EBUS - particularly in the Pacific Ocean - have been attributed to large-scale ocean-atmosphere processes4. Usually, ENSO is the leading mode of variability of the HCS35 and CalCS, and decadal oscillations like the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), and the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation (NPGO) are usually linked to California Current System variability4,36,37. In the Atlantic sector, however, the BenCS appears to not be affected by basin-scale thermocline perturbations (Atlantic El Niño), but highly influenced by small-scale local physical variability38. Nevertheless, Hagen et al. (2001) reported a potential influence of the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO)39, and the Antarctic Oscillation (AAO), and others (e.g., Dufois and Rouault (2012)) have suggested that the ENSO signal may be of great importance40. Several studies report a large influence of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) on upwelling magnitudes and interannual to decadal variability in the Canary/Iberian Current System14,16,41. In addition to the backdrop of these competing findings, there are no studies that report a interannual-to-decadal shared variability across all the EBUS, despite the well-known shared low-frequency variability between the northern and the southern Pacific Ocean, which is mainly due to ENSO.
In this context, the focus of this study is to understand the coherent and non-coherent low frequency variability across the EBUS, and to explore how it is linked to large-scale climate modes. The aims are to: (1) quantify the forcing dynamics (e.g., alongshore winds, wind stress curl, thermocline depth) that controls low-frequency modulations in each EBUS, (2) identify how the forcing is linked to large-scale climate dynamics, and finally (3) understand the extent to which large-scale climate dynamics imprint a coherent signal across EBUS. To conduct our analysis, we modelled ocean dynamics in upwelling areas using a global eddy-permitting configuration of the NEMO model42 from 1958 to 2015. In our simulation, the ocean in the EBUS domains is driven by a new wind product, obtained through a statistical downscaling and merging of the large-scale wind structures from JRA55do-v1.143 with the high resolution QuikSCAT winds. In the ocean model, passive tracers were released at the subsurface (150–250 m) in order to identify a proxy for coastal upwelling strength. This approach enables the cumulative effects of the different upwelling drivers to be measured using a proxy of nutrient fluxes (e.g. the passive tracer), which integrates the upwelling variability (e.g. vertical ocean currents). In terms of understanding the low-frequency variability of productivity in upwelling systems, this approach is more effective with respect to the analyses of the individual forcing (e.g., alongshore winds, wind stress curl, etc). However, there are shortcomings associated with the changes over time in subsurface nutrient concentrations38, which can generate a low-frequency signal from the modulation of the upwelling source waters. Nevertheless, this approach does allow a direct quantification of the extent to which upwelling efficiency, which is linked to vertical velocities, can raise the deep parcel to the euphotic zone.
Data and Methods
Model configuration
The low-frequency variability of EBUS is investigated in a numerical study based on the state-of-the-art modelling system NEMO (version 3.6). This is a three-dimensional, free-surface, hydrostatic, primitive-equation global ocean general circulation model44 coupled to the Louvain-la-Neuve Sea Ice Model, LIM245. Our configuration employs a global ORCA025 tripolar grid42 with \(\frac{1^\circ }{4}\) horizontal resolution: ~27.75 km at the Equator, ~14 m at 60°N or 60°S. The vertical grid consists of 75 levels, spaced from 1 m near the surface to ~200 m at the bottom, with partial steps representing the bottom topography46. To study the EBUS variability, we performed an ocean-only simulation (hereafter TRD55) covering the period from 1958 to 2015, with initial conditions for December 1957 provided by December 2015 of an existing NEMO ORCA025 ocean simulation (i.e., same code and resolution as TRD55) forced by JRA55dov1.1 reanalysis43 (hereafter JRA55). The extreme sensitivity of EBUS to the precise structure of the wind, as reported in several studies47,48,49,50,51 encouraged us to develop a new high-resolution dataset of wind based on observations, which was then used to force TRD55. We computed a statistical downscaling of the JRA55 wind over EBUS using QuickSCAT wind retrievals, following the method developed and reported by Goubanova et al. (2011)52. The statistical relationship, which is required to perform the statistical downscaling, is based on a multilinear regression between the near-surface winds retrieved by the QuikSCAT scatterometer (predictand, gridded product from IFREMER: 0.25° × 0.25° spatial resolution, 1-day temporal resolution from 2000 to 2008) and the large-scale sea level pressure (SLP) and near-surface wind fields from JRA55 data (predictors) for the period where predictand is available, which is from 2000 to 2008. This statistical relation between predictand and predictors is then used to downscale the JRA55 surface winds throughout the entire 1958–2015 period, to obtain a new high resolution dataset (with the same resolution of predictand, 25 km), corrected by observations. This technique allows for the correction of coastal wind patterns off EBUS, due to the accuracy of QuikSCAT53,54. In JRA55, although significantly improving on ERAInterim55, the representation of wind drop off is still an open issue that can effect Ekman pumping, coastal upwelling9 and alongshore transport56. In addition, the resolution of the Japanese reanalysis (~55 km) is still too coarse to resolve upwelling dynamics, which are typically confined to within 30 km from the coast. The remaining turbulent variables (temperature and specific humidity at 2 m), the radiative fluxes and precipitation are provided by the JRA55dov1.1 reanalysis, as 3 h mean values.
Passive tracer set up
Here, we aim to identify the water masses originating at the subsurface (usually rich in nutrients) in each EBUS (see the black squares in Fig. 1) that can reach the surface through vertical advection. Thus, following the approach of Combes et al. (2013 and 2015)57,58, who investigated the upwelling and cross-shore transport variability in the California Current System and Humboldt Current System, we introduce passive tracers at subsurface in each EBUS. These are calculated in the model by a passive tracer advection-diffusion equation with a damping term:
where Tr is the passive tracer concentration, AH is the horizontal diffusivity, AV is the vertical diffusivity, \(\overrightarrow{u}\) is the velocity field, T0 is the damping term that controls the continuous source of tracer at sub-surface and τ is the damping timescale set to 6 months (required to avoid an infinite growth of passive tracer concentrations within the model domain). To address the upwelling of the subsurface water, we prescribed the damping term (T0) so that the passive tracer (Tr) is set to 1 in the coastal areas, as illustrated by the white rectangles in Figs. 2 and 3 (from the coast to 50 km offshore), and in the subsurface from 150 m to 250 m in depth.
SSHa standard deviation (shaded areas) and mean SSHa (contour) for AVISO (top panel) and model solution (bottom panel) during 1993–2015 period; subplots: normalized SSHa from AVISO data (AVISO, red lines) and model solution (TRD55, black lines) during 1993–2015 period for each EBUS. Black squares indicate areas over which SSHa timeseries are calculated. “Corr” in the subplots indicate correlation coefficients between AVISO and TRD55 timeseries. This figure was plotted using MATLAB R2017a (https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2017a.html).
For (a) BenCS and (b) CanCS: Long-term mean (1958–2015) of surface passive tracers concentration released at subsurface at surface (left panels); low-frequency modulation of upwelling (UIslw, black line), alongshore wind stress (WS, purple line), wind stress curl (WSC, blue line) and RFI (RFI, green line) seasonal cycle and the reconstructed times series of upwelling (Trec, red line) (right panels). In cyan monthly timeseries of tracer anomaly (UI). Corr indicates the correlation between predictand and reconstructed timeseries; ρ indicates the isopycnal and D its mean depth. White boxes indicate the regions where the tracers have been released in the subsurface. UIslw, WSC, WS, UI time series are calculated at surface, while RFI is computed along the reference isopycnal ρ. All the times-series are normalized by their standard deviation. To distinguish time series they are stacked by a 4std vertical offset. This figure was plotted using MATLAB R2017a (https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2017a.html).
As Fig. 2 but for (a) CalCS and (b) HCS. This figure was plotted using MATLAB R2017a (https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2017a.html).
EBUS provide a temporally and spatially heterogeneous environment59 and they are usually latitudinally divided in different upwelling regimes38, so we divide each EBUS into a northern and a southern part and we inject two independent tracers in each domain. We divide the Benguela System into two areas separated to the north of Lüderitz (at 26°S, see white square Figs. 2 and 3), hereinafter Northern Benguela (15°S–25°S, NBenCS) and Southern Benguela (26°S–34°S, SBenCS). The California domain is instead partitioned at Cape Mendocino (34°S) in the Northern California System (34°S–41°S, NCalCS) and Baja California (34°S-27°S, SCalCS). The subdivision is even more obvious for the Canary and Peru Systems, and in the former we inject the tracer over the Iberian Peninsula (40°N–44°N, WIP or NCanCS) and over the Moroccan sector (20°N–28°N, SCanCS), and in the latter along the Peruvian coast (5°S–15°S, NHCS) and along the Chilean coast (25°S–35°S, SHCS).
Upwelling indices
In this work, we use the concentration of each subsurface tracer found at the surface as a measure of the upwelling efficiency. In particular, we define:
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The monthly upwelling efficiency index (UI): the monthly tracer concentration at the surface, from the coast to 150 km offshore and along the latitude band where the tracer is released (see white boxes in Figs. 2 and 3);
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The annual upwelling efficiency index (UIa): computed as UI but in annual mean;
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The low-frequency modulation of the upwelling efficiency seasonal cycle (UIslw): obtained by projecting the seasonal tracer concentration at the surface (from the coast to 50 km offshore and along the latitude where the tracer is released) onto the mean seasonal tracer spatial patterns. Upwelling intensity is considered in the selection of the season (see Supplementary Figure S1): in the Northern Hemisphere, May-June-July (MJJ) for NCalCS and SCalCS and April-May-June (AMJ) for SCanCS and SCanCS systems; in the Southern Hemisphere, upwelling December-January-February (DJF) in SBenCS, October-November-December (NDJ) along SHCS, and September-October-November (SON) in NBenCS and along NHCS.
Hereinafter, throughout the text and the figures, the term “upwelling” identifies the upwelling efficiency.
Drivers indices
To investigate the drivers of upwelling, we examine wind forcing (alongshore wind stress and wind stress curl) and thermocline depth as forcing. Specifically:
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Alongshore wind stress index (WS): obtained by projecting the seasonal alongshore wind stress (from the coast to 50 km offshore and along the latitude where the tracer is released) onto the mean seasonal wind stress spatial patterns. Alongshore wind stress is calculated by rotating the u and v components of wind stress to the shoreline direction;
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Wind stress curl index (WSC): obtained by projecting the seasonal wind stress curl (from the coast to 150 km offshore and along the latitude where the tracer is released) onto the mean seasonal wind stress curl spatial patterns.
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Thermocline depth or Remote Forcing Index (RFI): the seasonal depth variation of a representative isopycnal below the mix layer depth (usually around 10 m) in time (see Figs. 2 and 3 for isopycnals definitions). RFI is a measure of the relative change of thermocline depth, which is also linked to stratification, and to the passage of coastal trapped waves. Therefore RFI is influenced by both the remote forcing (e.g., waves) and the local forcing (e.g., winds, surface heating). The thermocline depth and the stratification, which are lumped together in the RFI index, can modify upwelling differently: the former by modifying the availability of nutrients to upwelling, and the latter by modifying the source depth of upwelled waters. Moreover, the remote signal captured by the RFI index is influenced either by waves generated at the equator (e.g., generated during El Niño events60) or by those produced by localized wind events along the coastal current systems (e.g., along CalCS61,62). We first analysed the net heat flux (Qnet). Unlikely, due to the nature of these areas and the complex air-sea feedback, Qnet results to be intensified toward the ocean during upwelling4.
The time series obtained by the projection method capture temporal modulations of the mean field, and have a positive sign, even though for example the sign of the wind stress field is negative (e.g., NH systems). The seasons considered when computing the drivers indices are the same as those used to compute the UIslw index.
Gridded observational data
Sea Level Pressure (SLP) fields are obtained as monthly means from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction-National Center for Atmospheric Research reanalysis product63 and are provided on a 2.5° × 2.5° horizontal grid (hereinafter NCEP SLP). In addition, we use the SST data set from the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC): the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Extended Reconstruction SST, version 3b, at 2° × 2° resolution product (hereinafter NOAA SST)64, which consists of monthly mean values from 1854 to the present. We restrict the period of record to 1958–2015 to match the model results. In addiction, for validation purposes we also use a 23-year time series of satellite altimetry, namely from 1993 to 2015, at \(\frac{1^\circ }{3}\times \frac{1^\circ }{3}\) resolution provided by Collect Localisation Satellites (CLS, Toulose, France; hereinafter AVISO).
Climate indices
The connection between upwelling variability and the large-scale climate is explored using correlation analyses with the following climate modes: the Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI65), the Pacific Meridional Mode (PMM66, the Atlantic Meridional Oscillation (AMO67), the South Pacific Meridional Mode (SPMM68) and the Tropical Pacific Decadal Variability (TPDV69) are investigated. The SPMM index is calculated from the data sets of NOAA SST anomalies (hereinafter NOAA SSTa) calculated with respect to 1958–2015 climatology. Following Zhang et al. (2014)68, the SPMM index is inferred by the regression of NOAA SSTa onto normalized NOAA SSTa time series averaged over the southeast Pacific (15°S–19°S, 103°W–107°W).
The significance of correlations is estimated based on the probability density function (PDF) of the cross-correlation coefficients betweenthe 2 time series y1 and y2. The PDF is built by computing the correlation of 5000 random pairs of time series that have the same autocorrelation of y1 and y2. The trend significance is evaluated based on the PDF of the trend coefficients.
Results
Model validation
We first use observed datasets to evaluate the performance of ocean hindcast TRD55 to simulate ocean variability. In Fig. 1, we compare modelled sea surface height anomaly (SSHa) standard deviation (shaded areas) and mean (contours) against the satellite altimetry AVISO SSHa data for the 1993–2015 period. In general, the standard deviation of the observed SSHa is slightly underestimated by TRD55 over BenCS, nevertheless, the amplitude and spatial structure of the model mean SSHa compares relatively well with AVISO. Maxima are located over the Indian Ocean and along the western boundaries of the ocean, while minima are over the Southern Ocean and along the eastern boundaries. The time series of the modelled SSHa variability along the coastal boundaries of each EBUS (subplots in Fig. 1), are also significantly correlated with the observations (black squares in Fig. 1). The modelled coastal SSHa explains a significant proportion of the sea level anomaly in all the EBUS. Major discrepancies are reported over the Atlantic basin. Off Benguela, and in particular off the Iberian coast, TDR55 exhibits some discrepancies from observations, likely reflecting the model’s inability to capture the internal variability induced by the Agulhas current in BenCS38 and by the Gibraltar Strait and the extension of the Gulf stream in the Western Iberian Peninsula70. In contrast, over the Pacific Ocean, the correlation between the modelled and observed variability is highly significant with R values between 0.88–0.93. For example, the strong positive anomalies during the warm ENSO events in 1998 and 2015 (El Nino years) are clearly evident in both the CalCS and HCS EBUS.
Drivers and trends of low frequency modulation of upwelling efficiency
To assess the drivers of low-frequency upwelling variability, we first examine the low-frequency modulations of the upwelling seasonal cycle. We set up a linear regression model between the extracted seasonal timeseries of the tracer (UIslw) as predictand and the timesseries of forcing (e.g., alongshore wind stress, wind stress curl and RFI) as predictors (see the Data and Methods section for definitions of the indices). Figures 2 and 3 displays the regression results, while Table 1 reports the linear regression coefficients (Coeff) of each forcing and their contribution in percentage (%). Table 1 also displays the upwelling variance explained (R2) by each forcing. The coefficients (Coeff) from the multiple linear regression approach are identified using standard least square inversions, which are not sensitive to the order of the forcing term. The approach allows us to easily find the combination of forcing/weights that maximizes our ability to reconstruct the upwelling indices. In contrast, the upwelling variances explained (R2) by the forcing are identified as the square of the correlation between each forcing and the upwelling index. The reconstructed tracer signals (Trec, red lines), which are the time-series obtained as a result of the linear regression, are significantly correlated with UIslw, explaining about 70% of the variance in all the domains (see “Corr” correlation coefficient in each subplot). Thus, UIslw is the result of low-frequency modulations of the forcing seasonal cycle, and high correlations of UIslw with annual variation of tracers in all domains (e.g., UIa, third row of Table 1) indicate that the modulation of the upwelling seasonal cycle dominates the upwelling interannual variability. The low-frequency variability of the upwelling seasonal cycle in the Benguela systems is dominated by fluctuations in the wind forcing (Fig. 2a), accounting for 72% in the north and 66% in the south (Table 1, R2 column). The stratification and coastal-trapped waves are the major drivers in the other regions, modulating the intensity of the subsurface upwelled water at interannual timescale. In particular, as the negative correlation coefficients in Table 1 indicate, the deeper the isopycnal the weaker the upwelling intensity. RFI explains about 65% of the modelled upwelling modulation in HCS, about 70% in NCalCS and up to 73% in CanCs, while the wind forcing are minor contributors (see Table 1, R2 column). The simple regression model has significant ability to reconstruct the upwelling low-frequency variability. However, in the SCalCS the overall correlation (R = 0.69, Fig. 3a) and the variance explained by the forcing are lower (RFI R2 = 0.37, Table 1, R2 column). In fact, the residual variabilities not explained by the forcing, may be related to other mechanisms that could potentially impact upwelling efficiency. These, for example, are (1) long-term changes in the properties of upwelling source waters33, and (2) eddies transport and cross-shore geostrophic transport, which can suppress or enhance coastal upwelling71,72 and may mitigate future upwelling changes73. Horizontal advection and eddy activities are strong and unpredictable in this region57,74. Finally, the Benguela and Canary systems show significant trends: positive for Benguela and negative for Canary (Table 1, last row, and Fig. 2). In BenCS, the trends track changes in the wind (e.g., curl and alongshore components), while the trends seem to be driven by stratification changes in CanCS. Although historical records may not be indicative of climate change response, it is important to report that the positive upwelling trends in the BenCS may appear consistent with the findings by Bakun (1990), while there is not supportive evidences in the other regions, particularly with the negative trend in the CanCS (Fig. 2b). In addition, the trends coherency between the northern and the southern domains of Benguela system appears to not support either the theory on the poleward displacement of high pressure-systems, which should favour upwelling poleward10. Collectively, these results suggest that changes in upwelling are dominated by the interannual to multi-decadal variability of the forcing functions, which have different expressions in the different EBUS.
Shared climate variability across EBUS
The low-frequency variability of upwelling in each EBUS likely reflects the local expression of the large-scale modes of climate variability that modulates the local forcing functions (e.g., wind stress, curl, thermocline anomalies, etc.), and the response to local drivers that are not connected to large-scale climate variability. Here, we explore the relation between upwelling indices and large-scale climate dynamics to quantify the extent to which climate modes contribute to coherent signals across EBUS. To explore the coherent variability across EBUS, we first computed a cross-correlation matrix of the upwelling indices (Fig. 4a). This initial analysis reveals that the EBUS upwelling climate variability is in the first order not coherent between the Pacific and Atlantic basin. The upwelling systems correlate only with the systems located in the same basin, despite weak correlations between CalCS and CanCS. Specifically, the northern and the southern upwelling of each domain are coherent, BenCS and CanCS correlate negatively, and CalCS and HCS correlate positively with a maximum value of 0.5. The Atlantic systems anticorrelation is, as expected, linked to the trends (Fig. 4b), the negative upwelling trend in the Canary opposes the positive upwelling trend in the Benguela (hereinafter the UI are the sum of the northern and southern part, due to the coherency resulted in Fig. 4). In contrast, the Pacific basin coherent variability is connected to ENSO. The dominant mode of variability (PC1-P, see Figure S2 for the spatial pattern), obtained by performing EOF analyses of the UI of the Pacific, explains 50% of the California and Peru total variance with correlations of ~0.65 and ~0.6 with MEI and TPDV indices, respectively (Fig. 4d). The remaining low-frequency variance, after removing the trends from Atlantic systems and ENSO from the Pacific systems, reveals little coherence across EBUS (Fig. 4b). In the Atlantic, the trends in the EBUS appear to be linked to different processes. As discussed in Section 3.1, the BenCS trend is driven by wind changes while CanCS trends are sensitive to local (e.g., thermocline depth and stratification) and remote (e.g., coastal trapped waves) forcing. The spatial structures of the trends, inferred by correlating the BenCS with NCEP SLPa (Fig. 5a) and CanCS with NOAA SSTa (Fig. 5e), confirm their different nature. The BenCS pattern (Fig. 5a) resembles the climate change trend in global sea level pressure found in the reanalysis and in the observations by Gillet et al. (2013)75 (see their Fig. 1, top panels). To further confirm the role of climate change in the BenCS trend, we perform a correlation map between the global average temperature index (e.g. climate change proxy) from NOAA reanalyses with NCEP SLPa during the experiment period (Fig. 5b). The resulting map almost exactly tracks the trend structure in the SLPa (compare Fig. 5a,b). The high-pressure system over the African continent, characteristic of this pattern, leads to enhanced upwelling winds, consistent with the finding by Bakun (1990) of increased upwelling-favourable winds in a warming climate. Nevertheless, it is important to stress that the mechanism proposed by Bakun (1990), known as the Bakun Hypothesis, is not consistent with our results. The SLP climate trend does not show an intensification of the continental-oceanic pressure gradient9. The temporal relation between the SLPa climate change pattern and the BenCS upwelling was explored by correlating an index that tracks the temporal variability of the SLPa trend pattern with the BenCS UI. The SLPa index is obtained by projecting SLPa onto the Fig. 5b correlation pattern (e.g., the climate change signature in the global sea level pressure). The correlation analyses reveal that BenCS trends and variability (e.g., detrended signal) are both connected to the SLP trend pattern and its interannual to decadal modulations with correlations of ~0.78 and ~0.30 (Fig. 5c,d). An analysis of the CanCS trends spatial pattern in Fig. 5e, instead, reveals an AMO type pattern in both space and time (Fig. 5f). A correlation analysis with the climate mode confirms that CanCS trends and variability (e.g., a detrended signal) is significantly linked to the AMO with correlations of ~−0.61 and ~−0.52 (Fig. 5g,h). The AMO modulates the inter-hemispheric meridional gradient of SST and, in turn, of SLP over the Atlantic basin67. Thus, during its positive phase, atmospheric surface pressure differences between North and South Atlantic lead to a south-westerly wind anomaly in Northern Hemiphere76,77,78, which tends to weaken upwelling favourable winds along the Canary systems. In addition, during this phase, the warm SST over the north Atlantic enhances stratification, and thus weakens upwelling in the Canary systems. These variations of the surface forcing, induced by the global warming over BenCS and by AMO over CanCS, are consistent with trends and drivers described in Section 3.1. After removing the signals that lead to coherent variability in the EBUS of each basin through linear regressions, we examine the variability that is not connected to ENSO for CalCS and HCS, to the AMO for CanCS, and to the global climate change trend for BenCS. Upwelling indices of the residual low-frequency variability in each EBUS are then correlated with large-scale SSTa and SLPa to examine the spatial coherence of the upwelling drivers. We found that the residual upwelling variability is linked to atmospheric local forcing structures in both the Pacific and in the Atlantic, which are characterized by an offshore system of high sea level pressure in the offshore (Fig. 6 for CalCS and HCS, 7 for BenCS and CanCS). In the Pacific Ocean (Fig. 6), a correlation map of the UI residual indices with SSTa revealed structures that resemble the negative phase of the North and South Pacific Meridional Modes (see Chiang and Vimont (2004)66; Zhang et al.68), which are known to act independently79,80. This is not surprising given that the pressure systems driving the residual upwelling variability (Fig. 6, middle panels) project onto the excitation patterns of the Meridional Modes (MMs) by altering the strength of the off-equatorial trade winds. The modulation of the winds trigger the MMs over the Pacific through the wind-evaporation-SST feedback (Xie and Philander (1994)). In their negative phase, the MMs are characterized by upwelling favourable winds and strong cooling. The link to the MMs variability is further confirmed by correlating the North and South MM indices against the residual variability of the CalCS (~−0.44) and HCS (~−0.32) (Fig. 6c,d). Although the correlations pass the significance test for a 95% confidence level, there is an important proportion of non-shared variance between the MM indices and the UIs, which may results from the definition of the indices. However, the spatial structure in SSTa and SLPa are very consistent with the footprint of the MMs. For the Atlantic basin (Fig. 7), the residual variability inprint in the SLPa and SSTa is not associated with any known mode of climate variability. The local atmospheric modulation, characterized by the high sea level pressure in the offshore region (Fig. 7, bottom panels), is very localized for the CanCS and shows some related variability over the Antarctic for the BenCS. However, the projection of the BenCS onto the Antarctic SLPa does not appear connected to annular modes or other related Antarctic variability.
(a) Cross-correlation matrix of UI; (b) Cross-correlation matrix of detrended UI for CanCS and BenCS and UI without MEI signal for CanCS and HCS. N and S in (a,b) indicate the Northen and the Southern UI of each domain. (c) UI of BenCS and -CanCS timeseries. The BenCS and -CanCS timeseries are the sum of the northern and southern UI, (d) PC1 of Pacific UI with MEI index. R in (c,d) identifies correlation coefficients. The correlation coefficients are calculated considering the unchanged UI (e.g. CanCS not -CanCS). This figure was plotted using MATLAB R2017a (https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2017a.html).
(a) Correlation pattern between BenCS UI and NCEP SLPa; (b) Correlation patterns between NOAA global average temperature (1958–2015) and NCEP SLPa; (c) BenCS UI and SLPa index; (d) detrended BenCS and detrended SLPa index. -d identifies detrended indices, R identifies significant correlation coefficients; (e) Correlation patterns between -CanCS UI and NOAA SSTa; (f) Correlation pattern between AMO index and NOAA SSTa; (g) -CanCS UI and AMO index; (h) detrended -CanCS UI and detrended AMO index. -d identifies detrended indices, R identifies significant correlation coefficients. The correlation coefficients are calculated considering the unchanged UI (e.g. CanCS not -CanCS). This figure was plotted using MATLAB R2017a (https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2017a.html).
(a) Correlation patterns between CalCS UI without MEI signal and NOAA SSTa (top panel) and with NCEP SLPa (middle panel); (b) Correlation patterns between HCS UI without MEI signal and NOAA SSTa (top panel) and with NCEP SLPa (middle panel); (c) -CanCS UI without MEI signal and PMM index. (d) -HCS UI without MEI signal and SPMM index. R identifies significant correlation coefficients. The correlation coefficients are calculated considering the unchanged UI (e.g. HCS not -HCS). This figure was plotted using MATLAB R2017a (https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2017a.html).
(a) Correlation patterns between BenCS UI without climate change signal (SLPa index) and NOAA SSTa (top panel) and NCEP SLPa (bottom panel); (b) Correlation patterns between CanCS UI without AMO index and NOAA SSTa (top panel) and NCEP SLPa (bottom panel). This figure was plotted using MATLAB R2017a (https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2017a.html).
Conclusions
In this work, we performed an ocean hindcast simulation for the period 1958 to 2015 using a global eddy-permitting ORCA025 configuration (\(\frac{1^\circ }{4}\) of horizontal resolution) of the NEMO framework, with the aim of modelling and studying the interannual to decadal variability of the major Eastern Boundary Upwelling Systems. The numerical simulation is forced by the recent JRA55-dov.1.1 surface-atmospheric dataset (at 55 km of resolution) for driving ocean sea-ice models. Specifically, the winds from the large-scale wind structures of JRA55dov.1.1 have been statistically downscaled to 25 km of resolution using the high resolution QuikSCAT winds. To quantify the upwelling, we introduced an ensemble of passive tracers in the simulation, which are continuously released in the subsurface layer (150–250 m) in each EBUS over a region from the coast to 50 km offshore. The statistics of the concentration of these passive tracers at the surface (e.g. UI, UIslw indices), which correspond to upwelled coastal water masses and ocean tracers (e.g., nutrients), enabling us to study the local and large-scale climate drivers of upwelling low-frequency variability and trends.
We first analysed the local drivers and trends of the low-frequency variability of the upwelling efficiency. We found that the common pattern favouring upwelling (e.g., equatorward wind stress, cyclonic wind stress curl and thermocline depth variation) explains the low frequency modulation of upwelling. The linear regression analysis showed that the wind forcing contribution to upwelling variability is dominant over the Benguela systems, while remote forcing of the thermocline and stratification forcing plays a crucial role in regulating upwelling fluctuations on the Canary, California and Humboldt systems (Figs. 2 and 3). The analysis also revealed upwelling trends in the Atlantic systems: the Benguela systems are characterized by positive trends, and the opposite occurs in the Canary systems. The Northern Canary upwelling negative trend is in line with previous studies (such as Pardo et al.16, Pérez et al.81 and Gómez-Gesteira et al.82), where negative trends are detected both in SST-based index and in wind stress. The interpretation of the Benguela positive trends are more complex, as the previous published results are conflicting. Depending on the period chosen for the analysis and the data set used, previous studies suggest no trend20, positive14,41,83 or negative trends14,16,84 for the upwelling in the Benguela systems. In the Pacific Ocean, our analysis showed no significant trends either in the upwelling and or in its drivers, in agreement with Combes et al.57, and Combes et al.58. Importantly, our results are in partially disagreement with the hypothesis of Bakun (1990) suggesting an increased upwelling due to increased wind stress induced by the intensification of the continental-oceanic pressure gradient under climate change conditions. Indeed, except over the Benguela systems, the wind stress forcing in the reanalysis product does not show significant positive trends. Furthermore, the wind trends coherency between the northern and southern domains of Benguela does not support either the hypothesis about the poleward displacement of high pressure-systems that should favour upwelling poleward10. Nevertheless, it should be mentioned that the presence or the absence of upwelling trends in the domains could be related to the dominance of the natural and internal variability in the historical records, but the likelihood of significant or non-significant greenhouse gas-related interactions cannot be completely dismissed. In summary, this statistical analysis on upwelling low-frequency variability suggests that the local (e.g., wind forcing, stratification and thermocline depth) and the remote (e.g., passage of coastal trapped waves) forcing, with different contribution in each EBUS, control the interannual upwelling variability. Thus, in order to predict and to propose hypotheses on the long-term variations in upwelling, identifying a proper index of upwelling in relation to the major drivers of the each domain is essential. In particular, both the coastal wind variations9 and the stratification have to be considered4,26 as potentially competitive or complementary drivers of upwelling variability under climate change (e.g., enhanced coastal temperature and stratification associated with stronger or weaker coastal winds). However, our analysis only considers the main mechanisms that drive the upwelling and no others possible processes that could impact the upwelling efficiency, such as the cross-shore transport via eddies and the geostrophic horizontal advection. Additional analyses, which include identifying other upwelling drivers, are the subjects of future work.
The second important issue addressed is the influence of the large-scale climate variability on long-term upwelling and the degree to which there is coherent low-frequency variability across EBUS. The variability associated with climate modes could be of importance to predict future perturbations at interannual to decadal time scales. Cross-correlation analyses among upwelling indices showed that the Atlantic and Pacific upwelling variabilities are mainly independent, while intra-basin domains variabilities present some coherency (Fig. 4). In the Pacific Ocean, the only coherent variability between the California and Humboldt systems is associated with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (Fig. 4), while the remaining low-frequency variance is partially explained by the independent expressions of the North and South Pacific Meridional Modes (Fig. 6), which are characterized in their negative phases by strong cooling and alongshore wind stresses in the California and Humboldt systems. In contrast, in the Atlantic, the coherent variability between the Canary and Benguela systems is associated with trends in upwelling (Fig. 4). However, consistent with the previous analysis, these trends are not dynamically linked and represent different processes. In the Benguela, the positive upwelling trend is forced by the climate change trend in global sea level pressure75, which is characterized by a strong high-pressure system over the African continent that leads to enhanced upwelling winds. In the Canary systems, the negative trend in upwelling is closely connected with the low-frequency variability of the Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation, as previously suggested in the literature14,16,41(Fig. 5). Aside from the trend components, the Canary and Benguela systems showed no coherent variations and their residual variability is forced by local atmospheric variability, namely a system of high pressure in the offshore regions (Fig. 7). However, as García-Reyes et al.2 argued in their study, the extraction of long-term trends from observational records and model simulations over the Pacific could have been complicated by the influence of climate modes (e.g., ENSO). Thus, our results highlight the uniqueness of each EBUS in terms of drivers and climate variability. Signs of global warming, characterized by strong upwelling winds in a changing climate, are evident only over Benguela systems and, from a broader climate prospective, EBUS do not share variability, except from the well-known influence of ENSO on Pacific systems. The question of whether the variabilities observed here are indicative of interannual to multidecadal upwelling fluctuations is obscured by the length of the time series, by the variable used to evaluate upwelling and by the use of an ocean-only simulation. Extending the current analysis to a longer period, with coupled models and with the same passive tracers approach, will help to clarify these issues, enabling the results to be compared, and to confirm any unexpected teleconnections between upwelling systems.
Data availability
The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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G.B., E.D.L., S.M. and D.I. conceived the study, G.B. performed the experiment; G.B. and E.D.L. analyzed the data; G.B., E.D.L., S.M., D.I. contributed to the interpretation of the results and to the paper writing. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
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Bonino, G., Di Lorenzo, E., Masina, S. et al. Interannual to decadal variability within and across the major Eastern Boundary Upwelling Systems. Sci Rep 9, 19949 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-56514-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-56514-8
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