Environmental Influences on South African Fish Catch: South Coast Transition
Author(s) -
Mark R. Jury
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of oceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1687-9414
pISSN - 1687-9406
DOI - 10.1155/2011/920414
Subject(s) - oceanography , upwelling , sea surface temperature , latitude , ocean gyre , submarine pipeline , climatology , boundary current , ekman transport , salinity , geology , hydrography , ichthyoplankton , environmental science , geography , fishery , subtropics , ocean current , fish <actinopterygii> , geodesy , biology
This study considers environmental factors influencing aggregate fish catch in the South Coast transition of South Africa. The environmental forcing is studied via (i) seasonal analysis of SeaWifs chlorophyll and related variables, (ii) composite analysis of atmospheric and oceanographic reanalysis data, (iii) statistical analysis of annual FAO fish catch with climatic indices, and (iv) analysis of depth-latitude hydrographic sections over the shelf (33–36S, 22–26E). In years of higher fish catch there is a northward shift of the subtropical anticyclones and upwelling that is partially related to Pacific El Nino. Westerly troughs skirt the Agulhas Bank creating onshore Ekman transport. Higher sea surface height inshore, and cooler sea temperatures and lower salinity offshore induce a gradient that weakens the Agulhas Current. These environmental conditions favour the southeastward migration of juvenile fish from west to south coast. A multivariate model of aggregate fish stocks, using four environmental variables: salinity and zonal currents in the Agulhas Current, sea temperature in the Agulhas source region, and geopotential height over the Cape, accounts for 53% of variance at 0-1 year lead. Freshening of the boundary current is a factor influencing aggregate fish catch in the South Coast transition
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