Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/handle/10553/139940
Título: Influence of extreme cold and warm oceanographic events on larval fish assemblages in the southern region of the California Current
Autores/as: Aceves-Medina, Gerardo
Uribe-Prado, Ana Gabriela
Jimenez-Rosenberg, Sylvia Patricia
Durazo, Reginaldo
Saldierna-Martinez, Ricardo J.
Avendano-Ibarra, Raymundo
Sarmiento Lezcano,Airam 
Clasificación UNESCO: 251007 Oceanografía física
251001 Oceanografía biológica
Palabras clave: Baja-California
Pelagic ecosystem
Variability
State
Water, et al.
Fecha de publicación: 2024
Publicación seriada: Marine Ecology - Progress Series 
Resumen: The larval fish community in the southern region of the California Current (CC) was analyzed to test the hypothesis of a northward expansion of tropical species for the summer-fall seasons of La Nina (LN) 2010-2011, The Blob 2014, and El Nino (EN) 2015-2016. Interannual temperature anomalies (-5 to +2 degrees C), as well as decreases in chlorophyll a (68%) and zooplankton density (71%), resulted in dramatic changes in the larval fish community, such as an 82% decline in larval fish density, unprecedented for the CC. Tropical species richness increased in the north by 46%, while temperate species decreased by 65% in the south. Mesopelagic species richness and relative abundance increased in the north by 53 and 92%, respectively. In the south, the species richness of the demersal component increased up to 39%, although demersal species were co-dominant with mesopelagic species, accounting for 47% of the relative abundance compared to 49% for the mesopelagic species. The magnitude of the changes in the community was unparalleled when compared with other warming events, such as EN 1983-1984 or EN 1997-1998. The differences were probably related to the presence of The Blob, which favored the transport of oceanic species into the neritic region of the CC. In both cold and warm years, fronts and mesoscale eddies in the middle part of the Baja California Peninsula represented barriers to the latitudinal distribution of species, even during intense tropicalization processes, since no latitudinal extensions in species distribution occurred.
URI: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/handle/10553/139940
ISSN: 0171-8630
DOI: 10.3354/meps14331
Fuente: Marine Ecology Progress Series [ISSN 0171-8630],v. 728, p. 199-219, (Febrero 2024)
Colección:Artículos
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