Project Overview - [show]
(A) Project Goal
- [ POBE-Project-Summary.pdf ]
Using US and international observational datasets combined with physical and biological
models, this project investigates the mechanisms of climate-related
variability in three Pacific boundary ecosystems: Gulf of Alaska
(GOA) and California Current System (CCS) referred to as the Northeast
Pacific (NEP), the Humboldt or Peru-Chile
Current System (PCCS), and the Kuroshio-Oyashio Extension (KOE) region.
(The figure below shows the regional domains)

(B) Research Activities -
(1) Assess to what extent, and by what mechanisms, large-scale climate
modes (e.g. PDO, NPGO, ENSO, and potentially others) drove coherent
changes across Pacific boundary ecosystems over the period 1960-2007.
(2) Quantify and explain how changes in regional ocean processes (e.g.
upwelling, transport dynamics, mixing and mesoscale structure) at each
boundary control phytoplankton and zooplankton dynamics. Then, use those
results to test the degree to which changes in each study region reflect
bottom-up control of their respective ecosystems.
(3) Quantify the extent to which changes in the statistics of
shorter-period events (e.g. intraseasonal oscillation, timing of spring
transitions) during different phases of the longer-period climate modes
(e.g. PDO, NPGO and others) determine the climate state of
boundary-current ecosystems.
(4)
Explore the range of uncertainties in the response of regional ocean
dynamics and their ecosystems to climate change using forcing scenarios
from selected climate model integrations that are part of the IPCC 2007
report. This last objective begins an assessment of the potential
impacts of climate change on regional ocean ecosystems, a topic poorly
addressed in the latest IPCC report, but the chief instrument for most
fisheries and coastal management.
(C) Main Hypothesis -
This diagram below shows the main path of the hypothesis of the proposal. The
hypothesis can be grouped in three principal sets. (H1)
Linking large-scale physical variability to regional scales through
comparison with available observations of the physical state of the
regional oceans along the Pacific Boundaries. (H2)
Understand the relative importance of regionally dependent forcing vs.
large-scale. How much of the variability along the boundary is coherent
and linked to modes of climate variability of the Pacific Ocean. (H3)
Link changes in the physical state at the regional scale with changes in
transport dynamics and nutrient flux. Our main hypotheses is that
ecosystem variability in the Pacific boundaries is driven by changes in
nutrient flux. Hence we seek for direct links between changes in
horizontal and vertical transport to observed measures of ecosystem
state.

(D) Research Tasks organization -
The research tasks are grouped in 5 topic areas that cover the following
geographical locations (color coded):
Pacific Basin,
Northeast Pacific (NEP),
Peru-Chile Current System (PCCS),
the Kuroshio Region (KOE)
and Cross-Bundary Synthesis
Activities.
List of Research Activities and Findings - [show all ]
Pacific Basin Scale Analyses
| Ocean/Atmosphere Coupled Dynamics ( ENSO, Aleutian/PDO, NPO/NPGO, AO ) - [show] | E. Di Lorenzo |
The goal of this task is to explore the large-scale ocean/atmosphere dynamics of the Pacific associated with modes of low-frequency variability such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation (NPGO), ENSO and others.
In Di Lorenzo et al. (2009b) we show that decadal dynamics of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation (NPGO) are linked through their relationships to ENSO. The PDO and NPGO are the oceanic expression of the two dominant modes of North Pacific atmospheric variability -- the Aleutian Low (AL) and the North Pacific Oscillation (NPO). We compute the two dominant modes of ocean/atmosphere co-variability in the Pacific sector [40S-62N] and find that the first co-variability mode captures the mature phase of the canonical eastern Pacific warming (EPW) ENSO and its atmospheric teleconnections to the AL, while the second co-variability mode captures the NPGO/NPO tropical expression, which leads the ENSO mode by ~8-12 months. The atmospheric projections of these first two modes are used to extract the AL and NPO forcings related to ENSO. These forcings are then integrated with an AR-1 model and lead to skillful reconstructions of the PDO (R=0.65), NPGO (R=0.60), and Pacific surface temperature decadal variance (R=0.4-0.8). We synthesize these results with to propose a framework for quasi-deterministic decadal oscillations in physical and biological variables of the Pacific (see diagram below).
More recently in Di Lorenzo et al. (2010) these findings have been expanded to account for additional teleconnections from the tropics to the extra-tropics between ENSO and the Pacific decadal modes. We find that dominant decadal fluctuations of the North Pacific sea surface temperatures and gyre-scale circulation of the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation (NPGO), are dynamically linked to the central Pacific warming (CPW) El Niño -- an emerging mode of interannual variability of the tropical Pacific that is different from the canonical EPW ENSO in that the SST maximum anomalies are displaced from the eastern to the central Pacific. We show that the CPW drives low-frequency changes in the extra-tropical atmospheric circulation that are integrated by the ocean to form the decadal NPGO. This new link provides us with an improved conceptual framework of Pacific climate variability that is summarized in the figure below. In this new framework, evidence for more frequent CPW events under greenhouse forcing scenarios is consistent with a more energetic late 20th century NPGO6, implying that NPGO will play an increasingly important role in shaping Pacific climate and marine ecosystems in the 21st century.

