Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America

Marine ecosystems are under the increasing stress of natural and anthropogenic climate variability and change. Knowledge of the patterns of distribution of chlorophyll concentrations as an indicator of phytoplankton abundance, its spatial and temporal variability, and the processes that control this...

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Autores principales: Marrari, M., Piola, A.R., Valla, D.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_22967745_v4_nNOV_p_Marrari
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spelling todo:paper_22967745_v4_nNOV_p_Marrari2023-10-03T16:40:49Z Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America Marrari, M. Piola, A.R. Valla, D. Central America Chlorophyll concentrations Climate change Large Marine Ecosystems MODIS SeaWiFS South America Trends Marine ecosystems are under the increasing stress of natural and anthropogenic climate variability and change. Knowledge of the patterns of distribution of chlorophyll concentrations as an indicator of phytoplankton abundance, its spatial and temporal variability, and the processes that control this variability is required to better understand the dynamics of marine populations and their fluctuations, including species of ecological and commercial importance. The Patagonia (PLME), South Brazil (SBLME), Humboldt (HLME), and Pacific Coastal Central America (PCACLME) Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs) around South and Western Central America support high primary productivity and fisheries catch. During the past few decades, climate change and warming in most ecosystems has become evident, which in combination with variations in production rates could impact the dynamics of marine ecosystems. The goal of this study is to assess the variability and longer-term trends in chlorophyll concentrations in the PLME, SBLME, HLME, and PCACLME, and to discuss implications for higher trophic levels. We use a combination of high-resolution satellite-derived chlorophyll concentration data from SeaWiFS (1997-2006) and MODIS Aqua (2002-2017) to examine spatial and temporal variability and analyze the record-length linear trends in these LMEs (25°N-60°S, 30-120°W). We use monthly composites with 2 × 2 km spatial resolution for the period of overlap between sensors (2002-2006) to compare retrievals and adjust the MODIS Aqua data series at all pixels using linear regressions. We then apply the corrections to the MODIS data and combine the SeaWiFS and adjusted MODIS datasets to generate the longest time series in chlorophyll concentrations to date in the region. Our results revealed significant increases in chlorophyll concentrations in large areas of the PLME (78.23%) and HLME (43.03%) during the last ~20 years, with large potential implications for trophic relationships and the reproductive success of fish. For the mostly subtropical SBLME (26.35%) and tropical PCACLME (13.35%), increasing trends were detected only in relatively small regions, while changes in the PLME and HLME are widespread. Results from this study contribute to a better understanding of the potential effects of environmental change on ecosystem dynamics and provide new tools to assess longer-term trends in satellite chlorophyll concentrations. © 2017 Marrari, Piola and Valla. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_22967745_v4_nNOV_p_Marrari
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Central America
Chlorophyll concentrations
Climate change
Large Marine Ecosystems
MODIS
SeaWiFS
South America
Trends
spellingShingle Central America
Chlorophyll concentrations
Climate change
Large Marine Ecosystems
MODIS
SeaWiFS
South America
Trends
Marrari, M.
Piola, A.R.
Valla, D.
Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America
topic_facet Central America
Chlorophyll concentrations
Climate change
Large Marine Ecosystems
MODIS
SeaWiFS
South America
Trends
description Marine ecosystems are under the increasing stress of natural and anthropogenic climate variability and change. Knowledge of the patterns of distribution of chlorophyll concentrations as an indicator of phytoplankton abundance, its spatial and temporal variability, and the processes that control this variability is required to better understand the dynamics of marine populations and their fluctuations, including species of ecological and commercial importance. The Patagonia (PLME), South Brazil (SBLME), Humboldt (HLME), and Pacific Coastal Central America (PCACLME) Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs) around South and Western Central America support high primary productivity and fisheries catch. During the past few decades, climate change and warming in most ecosystems has become evident, which in combination with variations in production rates could impact the dynamics of marine ecosystems. The goal of this study is to assess the variability and longer-term trends in chlorophyll concentrations in the PLME, SBLME, HLME, and PCACLME, and to discuss implications for higher trophic levels. We use a combination of high-resolution satellite-derived chlorophyll concentration data from SeaWiFS (1997-2006) and MODIS Aqua (2002-2017) to examine spatial and temporal variability and analyze the record-length linear trends in these LMEs (25°N-60°S, 30-120°W). We use monthly composites with 2 × 2 km spatial resolution for the period of overlap between sensors (2002-2006) to compare retrievals and adjust the MODIS Aqua data series at all pixels using linear regressions. We then apply the corrections to the MODIS data and combine the SeaWiFS and adjusted MODIS datasets to generate the longest time series in chlorophyll concentrations to date in the region. Our results revealed significant increases in chlorophyll concentrations in large areas of the PLME (78.23%) and HLME (43.03%) during the last ~20 years, with large potential implications for trophic relationships and the reproductive success of fish. For the mostly subtropical SBLME (26.35%) and tropical PCACLME (13.35%), increasing trends were detected only in relatively small regions, while changes in the PLME and HLME are widespread. Results from this study contribute to a better understanding of the potential effects of environmental change on ecosystem dynamics and provide new tools to assess longer-term trends in satellite chlorophyll concentrations. © 2017 Marrari, Piola and Valla.
format JOUR
author Marrari, M.
Piola, A.R.
Valla, D.
author_facet Marrari, M.
Piola, A.R.
Valla, D.
author_sort Marrari, M.
title Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America
title_short Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America
title_full Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America
title_fullStr Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America
title_full_unstemmed Variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around South and Western central America
title_sort variability and 20-year trends in satellite-derived surface chlorophyll concentrations in large marine ecosystems around south and western central america
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_22967745_v4_nNOV_p_Marrari
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AT piolaar variabilityand20yeartrendsinsatellitederivedsurfacechlorophyllconcentrationsinlargemarineecosystemsaroundsouthandwesterncentralamerica
AT vallad variabilityand20yeartrendsinsatellitederivedsurfacechlorophyllconcentrationsinlargemarineecosystemsaroundsouthandwesterncentralamerica
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