El Niņo's
dramatic impact
on ocean biology and carbon dioxide
captured by unique monitoring system
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE:
Thursday, 9 December 1999 at 14:00 U.S. Eastern Time
Media Contacts:
Debbie Meyer, MBARI (831) 775-1807
Jana Goldman, NOAA (301) 713-2483
Cynthia OCarroll,
NASA/GSFC
(301) 614-5563
MOSS LANDING, CaliforniaThe 1997-98 El Niņo/La Niņa had an unprecedented
roller-coaster effect on the oceanic food chain across a vast swath of the Pacific,
plunging chlorophyll levels to the lowest ever recorded in December 1997 and spawning the
largest bloom of microscopic algae ever seen in the region the following summer.
According to new results published in the December 10 issue of the journal Science,
El Niņo also dramatically reduced the amount of carbon dioxide normally released
into the atmosphere by the equatorial Pacific Ocean. Data from an array of instruments on
buoys, on ships, and in space, including NASAs Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-View Sensor
(SeaWiFS), gave researchers an unprecedented view into the extreme biological effects of
last years El Niņo/La Niņa event.
Over the past decade scientists have been able to observe the development and
progression of El Niņo warmingsand consequent changes in upwelling of
nutrient-rich ocean watersthanks to data continuously collected in the Pacific by
the buoys of the Tropical Atmosphere Ocean array, maintained by NOAAs Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory.
In 1996 new biological and chemical sensors were added to some of these buoys by the
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), allowing researchers for the first time
to directly and continuously gauge the fluctuating levels of biological productivity and
the concentration of carbon dioxide in the region. The launch of SeaWiFS in 1997 added yet
another ocean-monitoring tool capable of detecting subtle changes in ocean color that are
directly related to the concentration of chlorophyll, a prime indicator of biological
activity in ocean waters.
"This is the first time weve ever had a continuous set of biological
measurements from moored instruments and satellites during an intense El
Niņo, and
weve never seen such low chlorophyll concentrations," said MBARI biological
oceanographer Francisco Chavez, lead author of the new study.
It was the mooring measurements and SeaWiFS data that revealed surprisingly low and
high levels of chlorophyll, coinciding with El Niņos strongest phase and the
transition to La Niņa cooling. When the warm-water layer produced by El Niņo
extended to its greatest depths and the upwelling of nutrients necessary for phytoplankton
growth virtually ceased, chlorophyll values plummeted. Phytoplankton (microscopic algae)
form the base of the oceanic food chain.
The researchers were again surprised in mid-1998 when chlorophyll levels skyrocketed,
revealing the largest ever observed phytoplankton bloom, in area, for the equatorial
Pacific. In their published results, the researchers suggest that elevated iron
concentrations stimulated this intense bloom, a result of the increased upwelling
associated with La Niņa. Iron, an essential nutrient for phytoplankton growth, is
thought to be the limiting nutrient for productivity in the equatorial Pacific under
normal conditions.
El Niņo can also be credited with drastically cutting the amount of carbon
dioxide that this ocean region normally adds to the atmosphere. Unlike most parts of the
worlds oceans, the equatorial Pacific is a major contributor of atmospheric carbon
dioxide because of the carbon-dioxide-rich deep ocean waters brought to the surface here
and the relatively low levels of biological activity. The researchers calculate that 700
million metric tons of carbon normally released to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide were
kept in the ocean during the year that El Niņo conditions dominated the equatorial
Pacific. This is equivalent to half of the United States total annual carbon dioxide
emissions from fossil fuel burning.
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Authors and web sites:
F.P. Chavez, P.G. Strutton, G.E. Friederich: http://www.mbari.org
R.A. Feely, M.J. McPhaden: http://www.pmel.noaa.gov
G.C. Feldman: http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov
D.G. Foley: http://www.nmfs.hawaii.edu