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Upwelling, Coastal Productivity, and El Nino Events Content Objectives • SWBAT explain the causes and consequences of upwelling in coastal areas to marine biomass and regional weather patterns. • SWBAT explain El Nino events and their impacts on regional weather patterns and economies of the region. Oxygen-levels, Nutrients, and Temperatures Is the Bottom of the Ocean Best? Where to Live; Bottom or Top? • The surface waters contain most of the algae because they can do photosynthesis in the presence of light. • But, sunlight also brings higher water temps and thus lower O2/CO2 concentrations. Where to Live; Bottom or Top? • The ocean bottom is nutrient-rich since all of the dead and decaying animals from the top sink down and settle on the bottom. • In addition, the waters at the bottom are much colder, which means they can hold more dissolved O2/CO2. Bottom is the Dead Zone • Despite the coldest water, that is where all the bacteria are feeding on decaying matter. • Thus, they consume all the available oxygen without adequate mixing adding more at depth. What a Conundrum… • The answer? • Upwelling… Upwelling • When winds blow across the surface, they move surface waters away from land, causing deeper water to rise up to fill the void. • This draws up cold, nutrient-rich bottom waters to the surface. • This results in a boon for marine life nearshore. Upwelling • Upwelling tends to only occur where there is very deep water close to shore. • Upwelling is uncommon on the east coast, where the water remains somewhat shallow for many miles offshore. Upwelling off the California Coast • Notice the water is coldest right offshore. This is the upwelling zone. Influx of Nutrients Near Shore • In addition to upwelling, nutrient levels are higher near shore because rivers feed nutrients into the ocean. What About Coral Reefs? • Coral reefs are always found nearshore. • Although warm waters, they also have nutrients from land Wave Action Brings Oxygen El Niño Southern Oscillation • Under normal conditions, the coast of South America, especially near Peru contains very cold waters. El Niño Southern Oscillation • Under normal conditions, the coast of South America, especially near Peru contains very cold waters. • This is due to the Humboldt Current bringing up cold waters from the Antarctic. • In addition, there is significant upwelling off the coast El Niño Southern Oscillation • But, every 3-7 years, there is a sudden change in wind direction off Peru that stops the upwelling of cold waters. • This causes a dramatic rise in sea surface temperatures. • The impacts of this are vast El Niño Southern Oscillation • Increase sea temperatures result in increased evaporation and thus changes to the water content of the air. • This is transported by prevailing winds resulting in some regions having wetter than average weather and others drier. El Nino is Bad for Peru • The lack of upwelling means fewer nutrients in the water and higher temps means less dissolved gases. • The results are crashes in the marine life of the areas. • This results in economic collapses as fishermen can not catch fish to eat or sell and people starve. • In the north of the country, warmer waters means increased rainfall and flooding on land. Peru Civil War of 1982 • The economic crisis caused by the particularly strong El Nino of 1982 added to the tensions that resulted in the Peruvian Civil War. El Nino’s Effects on North America • Warmer weather to western Canada and southern Alaska • Drier weather to the Pacific Northwest • Wetter weather to southern California • Cooler and wetter weather to the southern U.S. El Nino 1997 • Biggest one ever recorded • California was blasted by massive rains and floods that went on all winter. • Heavy snow fell in the Sierra Nevada La Nina • Often following an El Nino is a La Nina event • La Nina’s bring unusually cold water to the Eastern Pacific and major changes to world weather patterns. • The Pacific Northwest gets usually cold • The southern U.S. experiences extreme drought. What About Now? This will be an El Nino Winter! • After the drought of the past two years, it is expected that we will have a very snowy winter!