Title :
Mesoscale cyclonic eddies and pelagic fisheries in Hawaiian waters
Author :
Seki, Michael P. ; Bidigare, R.R. ; Lumpkin, Rick ; Polovina, Jeffrey J. ; Kobayashi, Donald R. ; Flament, Pierre ; Foley, David G.
Author_Institution :
Southwest Fisheries Sci. Center Honolulu Lab., Nat. Marine Fisheries Service, Honolulu, HI, USA
Abstract :
The combination of prevailing northeasterly tradewinds and island topography result in the formation of vigorous, westward propagating cyclonic eddies in the lee of the Hawaiian Islands on time scales of 50-70 days. These mesoscale (~102 km) features are nowhere more conspicuous or spin up more frequently than in the Alenuihaha Channel between the islands of Maui and the Big Island of Hawaii. Like other open-ocean eddies, their biological impact can be significant, although Hawaii´s open-ocean, wind driven features dynamically contrast the well-studied cold core current-generated eddies such as those that spin off the Gulf Stream or the Kuroshio. These latter features characteristically trap or isolate an adjacent water mass retaining its developed floristic composition. Cyclonic eddies in subtropical waters such as around Hawaii vertically displace the underlying nutricline into the overlying, nutrient-deplete euphotic zone creating localized biologically enhanced patches. Direct high-resolution horizontal and vertical observations of these vortices made from satellite and shipboard platforms provide new perspectives on biological enhancement within open-ocean cyclonic eddies are presented. How eddies may directly influence pelagic fish distribution are examined from recreational and commercial fish catch data coinciding with the presence of eddies
Keywords :
aquaculture; oceanographic regions; Alenuihaha Channel; Big Island; Hawaiian Islands; Hawaiian waters; Makaira mazara; Maui; Pacific blue marlin; biological enhancement; biological impact; central Pacific Ocean; cold core current-generated eddies; euphotic zone; island topography; mesoscale cyclonic eddies; mesoscale features; northeasterly tradewinds; nutricline vertical displacement; open-ocean eddies; pelagic fisheries; subtropical waters; westward propagating cyclonic eddies; wind driven features; Aquaculture; Geoscience; Laboratories; Marine animals; Marine technology; Ocean temperature; Productivity; Recruitment; Satellites; Sea surface;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS, 2001. MTS/IEEE Conference and Exhibition
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
0-933957-28-9
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.2001.968069