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The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components

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dc.contributor.author Hutchings, L
dc.contributor.author Van der Lingen, CD
dc.contributor.author Shannon, LJ
dc.contributor.author Crawford, RJM
dc.contributor.author Verheye, HMS
dc.contributor.author Bartholomae, CH
dc.contributor.author Van der Plas, AK
dc.contributor.author Louw, D
dc.contributor.author Kreiner, A
dc.contributor.author Ostrowski, M
dc.contributor.author Fidel, Q
dc.contributor.author Barlow, RG
dc.contributor.author Lamont, T
dc.contributor.author Coetzee, J
dc.contributor.author Shillington, F
dc.contributor.author Veitch, J
dc.contributor.author Currie, JC
dc.contributor.author Monteiro, Pedro MS
dc.date.accessioned 2013-02-26T12:30:49Z
dc.date.available 2013-02-26T12:30:49Z
dc.date.issued 2009-12
dc.identifier.citation Hutchings, L, Van der Lingen, CD, Shannon, LJ, Crawford, RJM, Verheye, HMS, Bartholomae, CH, Van der Plas, AK, Louw, D, Kreiner, A, Ostrowski, M, Fidel, Q, Barlow, RG, Lamont, T, Coetzee, J, Shillington, F, Veitch, J, Currie, JC and Monteiro, PMS. 2009. The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components. Progress in Oceanography, vol. 83(1-4), pp 15-32 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0079-6611
dc.identifier.uri http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0079661109001104
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6572
dc.description Copyright: 2009 Elsevier. This is an ABSTRACT ONLY. The definitive version is published in Progress in Oceanography, vol. 83(1-4), pp 15-32 en_US
dc.description.abstract The Benguela system is one of the four major eastern boundary upwelling systems of the world. It is unusual as there are two stratified subtropical or warm temperate boundary regions, on either side of the major wind-driven upwelling region(19–34_S), which itself is subdivided at 26_S by the powerful Luderitz upwelling cell. Important biological components cross the boundary areas at different stages to complete the life-history cycle. While the ‘‘Bakun triad” of factors responsible for the development of large pelagic fish populations (enrichment, concentration and retention) provide an important unifying principle for understanding the compromise implicit in adaptation to upwelling systems, the role of predation has been neglected, as has the fish yield relative to photosynthesis. The role global climate change will have in the Benguela in terms of shifting boundaries or weakening or intensifying gradients is being explored. The interannual and decadal signals are so strong in the region that long term trends are difficult to distinguish. Intensive resource utilisation and the collapse of several fish stocks occurred in the Benguela region during the 1960s and 1970s, with different recovery trajectories in the north and the south. The Angolan subsystem can be described as a subtropical transition zone between the wind-driven upwelling system and the Equatorial Atlantic, with gentle upwelling-favourable winds, well-defined seasons, intermediate productivity and moderate, declining fisheries. It is separated from the Namibian subsystem by the Angola-Benguela front. The northern Benguela shelf is a typical coastal upwelling system with equatorward winds, cool water, high plankton biomass and moderate to high fish biomass, which is currently in a depleted state. A shift from sardines to horse mackerel occurred during the period 1970–1990, while hake have never fully recovered from intensive fishing pressure up to 1990. Widespread oxygen-depleted waters and sulphur eruptions result from local and remote forcing, restricting the habitat available for pelagic and demersal fish species. The Luderitz–Orange River Cone is an intensive perennial upwelling cell where strong winds, high turbulence and strong offshore transport constitute a partial barrier to epipelagic fish species. Upwelling source water alters in salinity and oxygen, across this boundary zone. A decline in upwelling-favourable winds occurred between 1990 and 2005. The southern Benguela region is characterised by a pulsed, seasonal, wind-driven upwelling at discrete centres and warm Agulhas water offshore. High primary productivity forms a belt of enrichment along the coast, constrained by a front. Low-oxygen water, which only occurs close inshore, may adversely affect some resources. The west coast is primarily a nursery ground for several fish species which spawn on the Agulhas Bank and are transported by alongshore jet currents to the west coast. The Agulhas Bank forms the southern boundary of the Benguela system and it displays characteristics of both an upwelling and a temperate shallow shelf system, with seasonal stratification and mixing, coastal, shelf-edge and dynamic upwelling, moderate productivity and a well oxygenated shelf. A largebiomass of fish occupies the Bank during the summer season, with some evidence for tight coupling between trophic levels. A cool ridge of upwelled water, with links to coastal upwelling and to the Agulhas Current, appears to play an important but poorly understood role affecting the distribution and productivity of pelagic fish. A boom in sardine and anchovy populations was accompanied by an eastward shift, followed by 5 years of poor recruitment by sardine but successful recruitment of anchovy, indicating changes in the early life-history patterns of these two species. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Elsevier en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Workflow;6599
dc.subject Benguela system en_US
dc.subject Boundary upwelling en_US
dc.subject Temperate boundary regions en_US
dc.title The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation Hutchings, L., Van der Lingen, C., Shannon, L., Crawford, R., Verheye, H., Bartholomae, C., ... Monteiro, P. M. (2009). The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6572 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Hutchings, L, CD Van der Lingen, LJ Shannon, RJM Crawford, HMS Verheye, CH Bartholomae, AK Van der Plas, et al "The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components." (2009) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6572 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Hutchings L, Van der Lingen C, Shannon L, Crawford R, Verheye H, Bartholomae C, et al. The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components. 2009; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6572. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Hutchings, L AU - Van der Lingen, CD AU - Shannon, LJ AU - Crawford, RJM AU - Verheye, HMS AU - Bartholomae, CH AU - Van der Plas, AK AU - Louw, D AU - Kreiner, A AU - Ostrowski, M AU - Fidel, Q AU - Barlow, RG AU - Lamont, T AU - Coetzee, J AU - Shillington, F AU - Veitch, J AU - Currie, JC AU - Monteiro, Pedro MS AB - The Benguela system is one of the four major eastern boundary upwelling systems of the world. It is unusual as there are two stratified subtropical or warm temperate boundary regions, on either side of the major wind-driven upwelling region(19–34_S), which itself is subdivided at 26_S by the powerful Luderitz upwelling cell. Important biological components cross the boundary areas at different stages to complete the life-history cycle. While the ‘‘Bakun triad” of factors responsible for the development of large pelagic fish populations (enrichment, concentration and retention) provide an important unifying principle for understanding the compromise implicit in adaptation to upwelling systems, the role of predation has been neglected, as has the fish yield relative to photosynthesis. The role global climate change will have in the Benguela in terms of shifting boundaries or weakening or intensifying gradients is being explored. The interannual and decadal signals are so strong in the region that long term trends are difficult to distinguish. Intensive resource utilisation and the collapse of several fish stocks occurred in the Benguela region during the 1960s and 1970s, with different recovery trajectories in the north and the south. The Angolan subsystem can be described as a subtropical transition zone between the wind-driven upwelling system and the Equatorial Atlantic, with gentle upwelling-favourable winds, well-defined seasons, intermediate productivity and moderate, declining fisheries. It is separated from the Namibian subsystem by the Angola-Benguela front. The northern Benguela shelf is a typical coastal upwelling system with equatorward winds, cool water, high plankton biomass and moderate to high fish biomass, which is currently in a depleted state. A shift from sardines to horse mackerel occurred during the period 1970–1990, while hake have never fully recovered from intensive fishing pressure up to 1990. Widespread oxygen-depleted waters and sulphur eruptions result from local and remote forcing, restricting the habitat available for pelagic and demersal fish species. The Luderitz–Orange River Cone is an intensive perennial upwelling cell where strong winds, high turbulence and strong offshore transport constitute a partial barrier to epipelagic fish species. Upwelling source water alters in salinity and oxygen, across this boundary zone. A decline in upwelling-favourable winds occurred between 1990 and 2005. The southern Benguela region is characterised by a pulsed, seasonal, wind-driven upwelling at discrete centres and warm Agulhas water offshore. High primary productivity forms a belt of enrichment along the coast, constrained by a front. Low-oxygen water, which only occurs close inshore, may adversely affect some resources. The west coast is primarily a nursery ground for several fish species which spawn on the Agulhas Bank and are transported by alongshore jet currents to the west coast. The Agulhas Bank forms the southern boundary of the Benguela system and it displays characteristics of both an upwelling and a temperate shallow shelf system, with seasonal stratification and mixing, coastal, shelf-edge and dynamic upwelling, moderate productivity and a well oxygenated shelf. A largebiomass of fish occupies the Bank during the summer season, with some evidence for tight coupling between trophic levels. A cool ridge of upwelled water, with links to coastal upwelling and to the Agulhas Current, appears to play an important but poorly understood role affecting the distribution and productivity of pelagic fish. A boom in sardine and anchovy populations was accompanied by an eastward shift, followed by 5 years of poor recruitment by sardine but successful recruitment of anchovy, indicating changes in the early life-history patterns of these two species. DA - 2009-12 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Benguela system KW - Boundary upwelling KW - Temperate boundary regions LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2009 SM - 0079-6611 T1 - The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components TI - The Benguela Current: An ecosystem of four components UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6572 ER - en_ZA


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