Spatial shifts in productivity of the coastal ocean over the past two decades induced by migration of the Pacific Anticyclone and Bakun effect in the Humboldt Upwelling Ecosystem
Nicolas Weidberg, Andres Ospina-Alvarez, Jessica Bonicelli, Mario, Barahona, Christopher M. Aiken, Bernardo R. Broitman, Sergio A. Navarrete

TL;DR
This study examines how climate-driven shifts in wind patterns and the Pacific Anticyclone have caused heterogeneous changes in primary productivity along the Humboldt Upwelling Ecosystem over two decades.
Contribution
It reveals the contrasting effects of climate-induced wind changes on productivity and ocean conditions across different regions of the HUE.
Findings
Decreased spring upwelling winds between 30° and 34° S led to reduced Chlorophyll-a.
Increased upwelling winds north of 30° S enhanced Chlorophyll-a and productivity.
Poleward migration of the South Pacific Anticyclone caused regional heterogeneity in oceanographic trends.
Abstract
Intensification and poleward expansion of upwelling favourable winds have been predicted as a response to anthropogenic global climate change and have recently been documented in most Eastern Boundary Upwelling Ecosystems of the world. To identify how these processes are impacting nearshore oceanographic habitats and, especially, long term trends of primary productivity in the Humboldt Upwelling Ecosystem (HUE), we analysed time series of sea level pressure, wind stress, sea surface and atmospheric surface temperatures, and Chlorophyll-a, as a proxy for primary productivity, along 26{\deg} - 36{\deg} S. We show that climate induced trends in primary productivity are highly heterogeneous across the region. On the one hand, the well documented poleward migration of the South Pacific Anticyclone (SPA) has led to decreased spring upwelling winds in the region between ca. 30{\deg} and…
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