Scientia Marina (Sep 2016)

Three-dimensional connectivity during summer in the northern Gulf of California

  • Carolina Montaño-Cortés,
  • Silvio G. Marinone

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.04370.15A
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 80, no. 3
pp. 409 – 421

Abstract

Read online

Connectivity studies in the Gulf of California are an important tool for improving the use and management of the gulf’s natural resources. The goal of this work was to study the three-dimensional connectivity in the northern Gulf of California during two representative months of summer when most local marine species spawn. Passive particles were advected for eight weeks in a three-dimensional current field generated by a three-dimensional baroclinic numerical model. The results indicate that the locations of greatest particle retention were the Upper Gulf and the Seasonal Eddy. The Seasonal Eddy corresponded to the area of largest particle catchment because the continental coastal current carries most particles released in the Midriff Archipelago region; subsequently these particles were entrained in the seasonal cyclonic eddy, causing most of them to remain within it. We conclude that the continental coastal current and the Seasonal Eddy control the connectivity patterns in the northern Gulf of California.

Keywords