Differences in coastal and oceanic SST warming rates along the Canary upwelling ecosystem from 1982 to 2010
Longitude
Marine ecosystem
DOI:
10.1016/j.csr.2012.07.023
Publication Date:
2012-08-16T15:31:39Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Abstract Sea surface temperature (SST) trends were calculated for the Moroccan part (22–33 °N) of the Canary upwelling ecosystem, which is characterized by permanent upwelling. This analysis was carried out from 1982 to 2010 by means of daily SST data with an approximate spatial resolution of 4×4 km. SST trends are not homogeneous either in latitude or longitude. SST trends were observed to increase southward, which can be explained in terms of air temperature ( T air ) trends that follow a similar pattern. In addition, remarkable differences in warming trends were observed between coastal and ocean locations at the same latitude ( Δ SST trend = SST ocean trend − SST coast trend ) . ΔSST trend is positive at most of latitudes showing that the ocean warming rate is higher than the coastal one. The differences between coast and ocean were observed to depend on upwelling index (UI) intensity. Actually, UI calculated for the months with intense upwelling (May–September) showed a no significant positive trend and was significantly correlated ( R =0.44; p R =0.57; p
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