|
Meroplanktonic distribution and circulation
in a coastal retention zone of the northern California upwelling
system
S.R.
Wing, L.W. Botsford, S.V. Ralston and J.L. Largier
1998. Limnology And Oceanography 43 (7): 1710-1721
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that settlement of several crab species
along the coast north of Point Reyes (38 degrees 00'N, 123 degrees
00'W occurs primarily during relaxation from upwelling, when warm
water flows poleward from the Gulf of the Farallones. During 1994
and 1995 we sampled planktonic larval distributions and hydrography
both south and north of Point Reyes during upwelling to test whether
high concentrations of crab and rockfish larvae were concentrated
in the source of the relaxation flow to the south of Point Reyes.
An upwelling plume off Point Reyes and an "upwelling shadow,"
indicated by warmer, less saline water in the northern Gulf, were
evident in both years, as were frontal regions that marked the
boundaries between water types of three different types: (1) newly
upwelled, (2) oceanic, and (3) San Francisco Bay outflow. In addition,
there was a fourth type, termed Gulf water, that was a mixture
of these three types. Concentrations of larvae of cancrid, pinnotherid,
and "coastal" crabs and rockfishes were high south of
Point Reyes but were low or absent in the newly upwelled water
north of the point. Within the upwelling shadow, these meroplankton
taxa were associated with different water masses. Several intertidal
crab species and early-stage cancrid crabs were concentrated in
San Francisco Bay outflow water, and coastal Gulf water late-stage
cancrid crabs, early- and late-stage pinnotherid crabs, and rockfishes
were concentrated at the frontal region between newly upwelled
and Gulf water. Of the taxa examined, only rockfishes were found
offshore in oceanic water. The high concentrations of meroplankton
observed suggest that the Gulf of the Farallones is an important
retention area for larvae that settle into coastal populations
in the Gulf and to the north via poleward transport during upwelling
relaxation.
|