Short, shelf-break canyons are shown to have a substantial influence on loc
al water properties and zooplankton distribution. Barkley Canyon (6 km long
) off the west coast of Vancouver Island was extensively sampled in July 19
97 and found to have water property and current patterns similar to those o
bserved over Astoria Canyon (22 km long) off the coast of Washington State.
Results from Barkley Canyon reveal that the canyon influence can occur ver
y close to the surface (at the thermocline depth of 10 m) and that, near th
e canyon rim, the stretching vorticity generated over the canyon is strong
enough to produce a closed cyclonic eddy of sufficient strength to trap dee
p passively drifting tracers. Most zooplankton species are advected by the
currents; those near the ocean surface pass over the canyon, while those at
depth are advected toward the coast. Euphausiids (Euphausia pacifica and T
hysanoessa spinifera), the strongest swimming zooplankton collected in the
1997 study, were most prevalent in the closed eddy region near the head of
the canyon. The observed aggregation of these animals appears to be linked
to their ability to remain at specific depths combined with advection by ho
rizontally convergent flows in the eddy.