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Upwelling in the World Ocean
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Presentation Points Mechanisms that create ocean upwelling
Types of upwelling Identifying upwelling on satellite-derived maps Ecological and economic effects of upwelling
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Mechanisms that create ocean upwelling
Wind Coriolis Effect Ekman Transport
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Upwelling refers to deep water that is brought to the surface.
Areas of upwelling are created by surface winds that pull water away from an area. This deficit of water on the surface invites water to come up from deeper regions.
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To understand upwelling, you must be familiar with how the Coriolis Force affects ocean surface currents. The Coriolis Effect acts on moving water, because it is not attached to the rotating Earth. As water flows over the rotating earth, it appears to deflect to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and the left in the Southern.
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Due to friction between the layers of water in the ocean and the Coriolis Effect, the net result of wind blowing across the surface of the water is transportation of a layer of water 90 degrees to the direction of the wind. This is known as Ekman Transport.
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Types of Upwelling Equatorial Coastal Seasonal
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1. Equatorial Upwelling Water Flow Upwelling
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Look at the equator in the Pacific Ocean.
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2. Coastal Upwelling (follow the black arrows)
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What’s the difference between Peru(A) and Columbia (B)?
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3. Seasonal upwelling Wind Wind Onshore winds pile water up on shore, thus surface water will be forced downward. This is ‘downwelling’. Offshore winds take water away from shore, thus water from depth will upwell to the surface.
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The Monsoonal wind shifts in Oman create very different conditions.
April, 1999 Onshore winds: Downwelling August, 1999 Offshore winds: Upwelling
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Identifying upwelling on satellite-derived maps
Sea Surface Temperature Ocean Color
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The deep water that surfaces in upwelling is cold; by looking at Sea Surface Temperature maps we can identify cool upwelled water versus hotter surface water.
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Upwelled water also contains nutrients (nitrate, phosphate, silicate) and dissolved gases (oxygen and carbon dioxide) that are not utilized at depth because of a lack of sunlight. Now on the surface, these nutrients and gases help to fuel photosynthesis by small algae called phytoplankton.
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Phytoplankton photosynthesize using specialized color pigments called chlorophyll. Thus, “Ocean Color” maps are another way to identify areas of upwelling. Where on this ocean color map are high phytoplankton concentrations?
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Ecological and Economic effects of upwelling:
Upwelling leads to more phytoplankton More phytoplankton leads to more fish More fish lead to commercial fishing jobs and to more seafood
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Phytoplankton come in many shapes and forms
Phytoplankton come in many shapes and forms. Collectively they form the base of oceanic food webs. Without upwelling many of the world’s fisheries would not thrive.
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Some climatic events can reduce upwellings.
~ El Nino
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Along Peru’s coast, an El Nino event decreases the coastal winds
Along Peru’s coast, an El Nino event decreases the coastal winds. Thus the upwelling from below is slowed. An El Nino condition results from weakened trade winds in the western Pacific Ocean near Indonesia, allowing piled-up warm water to flow toward South America.
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Even though upwelling areas account for only 1% of the ocean surface, they support 50% of the worlds fisheries.
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Productivity (phytoplankton growth) of an area is determined by the rate and the duration of upwelling. Rate of upwelling determines phytoplankton cell size. Duration of upwelling determines the total amount of phytoplankton. small vs. large few vs. many
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Classification of upwelling systems in terms of rate and duration:
Low Medium High RATE DURATION Long Short After Thurman, H.V. (1994)
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Moderate rates of upwelling for long duration (8 months or longer) provide the ultimate combination for a large fishery. With too low or too high a rate, phytoplankton are small, so there is a trophic level between the algae and the fish….therefore the fish receive less energy.
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Upwelling and Fisheries
January April July October Using this series of Sea Surface Temperature Maps from 1999, can you determine areas/times for possible fisheries? (Hint: Look at Peru’s coast in January and April. Look at the northwestern tip of Africa in July and October.)
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