Non-stationary climate-salmon relationships in the Gulf of Alaska
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10508/15436Visitar enlace: https://royalsocietypublishing ...
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Litzow, Michael; Ciannelli, L. (Lorenzo); Puerta, P. (Patricia); Wettstein, Justin; Rykaczewski, RyanDate
2018Type
research articleKeywords
climate indicesnon-stationary relationships
novel climate
North Pacific Gyre Oscillation
Pacific Decadal Oscillation
Pacific salmon
Abstract
Studies of climate effects on ecology often account for non-stationarity in individual physical and biological variables, but rarely allow for non-stationary
relationships among variables. Here, we show that non-stationary relationships
among physical and biological variables are central to understanding climate
effects on salmon (Onchorynchus spp.) in the Gulf of Alaska during 1965–
2012. The relative importance of two leading patterns in North Pacific climate,
the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and North Pacific Gyre Oscillation
(NPGO), changed around 1988/1989 as reflected by changing correlations
with leading axes of sea surface temperature variability. Simultaneously,
relationships between the PDO and Gulf of Alaska environmental variables
weakened, and long-standing temperature–salmon and PDO–salmon covariance declined to zero. We propose a mechanistic explanation for changing
climate–salmon relationships in terms of non-stationary atmosphere–ocean
interactions coinciding with ...