Jj. Polovina et al., DECADAL AND BASIN-SCALE VARIATION IN MIXED-LAYER DEPTH AND THE IMPACTON BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTION IN THE CENTRAL AND NORTH PACIFIC, 1960-88, Deep-sea research. Part 1. Oceanographic research papers, 42(10), 1995, pp. 1701-1716
Changes in winter and spring mixed Layer depths in the North Pacific o
n decadal and basin scales affect biological production. In the subtro
pical and transition zones these depths were 30-80% greater during 197
7-88 than during 1960-76; in the subarctic zone they were 20-30% shall
ower. We attribute these changes to an intensification of the Aleutian
Low Pressure System. A deeper mixed layer might increase phytoplankto
n production in nutrient-poor regions by supplying more deep nutrients
; it might decrease production in light-poor regions by mixing cells i
nto darker water. A plankton population dynamics model suggests that a
deeper subtropical mixed layer and a shallower subarctic mixed layer
both would increase primary and secondary production by about 50%, and
these increases were found not to be very sensitive to model paramete
r values; in the transition zone, however, the predicted change in pro
duction was smaller and more sensitive to changes in model parameters.
Increases in higher tropic levels have been observed in subtropical a
nd subarctic zones during 1977-88. This is consistent with model resul
ts and the idea that the subtropical zone is nutrient-poor, the subarc
tic zone is light-poor, and the transition zone is not consistently li
mited by any one thing. Further, our results show changes in mixed lay
er depths occur on decadal and basin scales and may be an important me
chanism Linking variation in the atmosphere and oceanic ecosystem prod
uctivity.