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Climate anomalies generate an exceptional dinoflagellate bloom in San Francisco Bay

January 1, 2005

We describe a large dinoflagellate bloom, unprecedented in nearly three decades of observation, that developed in San Francisco Bay (SFB) during September 2004. SFB is highly enriched in nutrients but has low summer‐autumn algal biomass because wind stress and tidally induced bottom stress produce a well mixed and light‐limited pelagic habitat. The bloom coincided with calm winds and record high air temperatures that stratified the water column and suppressed mixing long enough for motile dinoflagellates to grow and accumulate in surface waters. This event‐scale climate pattern, produced by an upper‐atmosphere high‐pressure anomaly off the U.S. west coast, followed a summer of weak coastal upwelling and high dinoflagellate biomass in coastal waters that apparently seeded the SFB bloom. This event suggests that some red tides are responses to changes in local physical dynamics that are driven by large‐scale atmospheric processes and operate over both the event scale of biomass growth and the antecedent seasonal scale that shapes the bloom community.

Publication Year 2005
Title Climate anomalies generate an exceptional dinoflagellate bloom in San Francisco Bay
DOI 10.1029/2005GL023321
Authors J. E. Cloern, T.S. Schraga, C.B. Lopez, N. Knowles, Labiosa R. Grover, R. Dugdale
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geophysical Research Letters
Index ID 70029622
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization California Water Science Center; San Francisco Bay-Delta; Toxic Substances Hydrology Program; Pacific Regional Director's Office