Loading…
Spatiotemporal variability of satellite-derived abundance of Karenia spp. during 2021 in shelf waters along the Pacific coast of Hokkaido, Japan
Unprecedented catastrophic damage to coastal fisheries attributable to harmful Karenia outbreaks were reported in Pacific coastal shelf waters off the southern coast of Hokkaido from late summer to autumn in 2021. To understand the spatiotemporal variability of the Karenia blooms, we analyzed Sentin...
Saved in:
Published in: | Frontiers in Marine Science 2024-10, Vol.11 |
---|---|
Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites |
Online Access: | Get full text |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Summary: | Unprecedented catastrophic damage to coastal fisheries attributable to harmful
Karenia
outbreaks were reported in Pacific coastal shelf waters off the southern coast of Hokkaido from late summer to autumn in 2021. To understand the spatiotemporal variability of the
Karenia
blooms, we analyzed Sentinel 3-derived abundances of
Karenia
spp. together with marine environmental variables.
Karenia
spp. were very widely distributed over a maximum of more than 400 km along the shelf from the easternmost Pacific coast of Hokkaido to Cape Erimo, where there was a nearly stable water-mass front, to the west, where pure subtropical water inhibited the westward expansion of
Karenia
spp. blooms. The duration of the appearance of
Karenia
spp. at a fixed point was very long—about 45 days—in the middle part of the shelf. East of the Tokachi River, the time-averaged abundances of
Karenia
spp. were robustly correlated with the time-averaged alongshore velocity and stability of the Coastal Oyashio, a coastal boundary current; more intense and stable alongshore currents were associated with less developed
Karenia
spp. blooms. Time-averaged abundances of
Karenia
spp. were the highest in the middle part of the shelf, west of the Tokachi River, where low-salinity water from the river suppressed the development of the surface winter mixed layer and might have fostered favorable growth conditions and supplied nutrients of land origin. During the period of
Karenia
spp. blooms, abundances changed rapidly on a small scale (typically, ≤2 days and ≤50 km) in association with physical-biochemical coupled submesoscale variations. Subsampling of these variations of
Karenia
spp. abundances at 1-day intervals showed that the maxima and center of gravity of
Karenia
spp. abundances moved slowly westward along the coast at a typical velocity of 4 cm s
−1
. This velocity was one-third that of the time-averaged alongshore velocity of the Coastal Oyashio. Particle-tracking experiments implied that horizontal advection by the Coastal Oyashio, which supplied
Karenia
spp. eliminated from the upstream shelf to the downstream shelf, contributed to the long duration of
Karenia
spp. blooms on the middle part of the shelf. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 2296-7745 2296-7745 |
DOI: | 10.3389/fmars.2024.1452762 |