Los Angeles Times - 29.08.2019

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B2 THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 2019 LATIMES.COM


Record high Pacific
Ocean temperatures record-
ed off the West Coast in re-
cent years have receded to
near normal, according to a
report on the California Cur-
rent.
That cool shift marks the
end of “the blob,” the mass of
warm water that dominated
the West Coast, and of the El
Niño event that followed. It’s
unclear, however, what that
means for fish and marine
mammals, scientists with
the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administra-
tion stated in the 2019
ecosystem status report for
the California Current
Ecosystem.
“The big thing is that a lot
of the physical conditions of
the ocean here off of our
coast are beginning to re-
turn to normal,” said Elliott
Hazen, a research ecologist
with NOAA’s Southwest
Fisheries Science Center in
La Jolla. “But it is not clear
yet whether the ecosystem is
as well.”
Starting around late 2013,
waters off the West Coast
rose 2 to 4 degrees above
normal, as a high-pressure
system in the Pacific shut
down westerly winds that
channel cool waters down
the West Coast. That gave
rise to the warm, stagnant
waters of “the blob,” an oce-
anic anomaly that contin-
ued until about 2016. Ocean
warming continued in 2015-
16 with an El Niño event, in
which warm equatorial wa-
ter heats up the ocean off
California.
Throughout that period,
populations of sardines and
other small fish crashed,
leading to record numbers of
young sea lion strandings. It
also brought tropical fish, in-
cluding yellowfin and bluefin
tuna, into California waters.
That wave of warm water
culminated in August 2018,
when the sea surface tem-


perature at Scripps Pier in
La Jolla hit a record 78.6 de-
grees, the highest in the
pier’s 102-year history.
This year, the California
Current has returned to
more typical temperatures,
though it’s still running
about one-half to 1 degree
higher than average, Hazen
said. That has brought a
partial restoration of the re-
gion’s marine life. Sardine
fisheries have been closed
for five years because of low
stocks, while anchovy are re-
covering, said Dale Sweet-
nam, deputy director of the
Fisheries Resources Divi-
sion of NOAA.
“The thing we’re seeing
right now, is that the sardine
have not yet started to come
back, but the anchovies have
been doing very well,” said
Toby Garfield, director of

the Environmental Re-
search Division at NOAA’s
Southwest Fisheries Scien-
ce Center. “In different
areas, the pockets of an-
chovies are coming back.”
As anchovy populations
pop back up in coastal wa-
ters, humpback whales and
other marine mammals
have followed suit, making
rare appearances near the
coast.
“We have been seeing
humpback whales feeding
offshore, foraging on an-
chovies” off the Central
Coast, Hazen said.
The whales are even ven-
turing near San Diego
beaches, to the delight of ob-
servers. Although gray
whales make regular migra-
tions off Southern Califor-
nia, humpbacks are more
unusual visitors.

“In fact, we had a juvenile
humpback playing right off
the lab yesterday, in La Jol-
la,” Sweetnam said last
week. “He was breaching
and playing with all the
boats and kayakers. We
haven’t seen humpbacks
playing in La Jolla for a long
time.
The close encounters
with humpbacks have had
their downside too, as more
of the whales have become
entrapped in fishing gear.
Whale entanglements in 2015
through 2018 were more than
double the annual average
for the years 2000 to 2013, the
report found.
Sea lion pups are thriving
anew, the report found. The
pups experienced mass
strandings during “unusual
mortality events” between
2013 and 2015, when sea lion

mothers struggled to find
enough food to nurse their
young.
During that time, sick
and malnourished pups
washed ashore in Southern
California, taxing the limits
of marine mammal rescue
organizations. By 2018, how-
ever, they appeared to be
bouncing back, scientists
said.
“Pup count, weight and
growth are all increasing,”
Hazen said before adding a
word of caution. “The high
pupping is good, but we still
have to see if they grow” to
adulthood.
Seabirds were also stag-
ing a comeback. Although
there were major “wrecks,”
or die-offs, of auklets and
murres in 2014 through 2016,
there was no widespread
mortality in 2017 and 2018,

the report stated.
Scientists are still puz-
zling out what these changes
mean in the long term, and
whether phenomena such as
humpback whale patterns
are statistical blips or on-
going trends.
“Even though the warm
water has largely receded by
2016, we’re still seeing hump-
back whales closer to shore,”
Hazen said. “Is this just an
aftershock of the blob, or is
this what we’re going to be
seeing for the next two, five,
10 years? We just don’t know
yet.”

Brennan writes for the San
Diego Union-Tribune.

‘The blob’ off West Coast cools down


The waning of a mass


of warm ocean water


is helping anchovies


and humpback whales.


By Deborah
Sullivan Brennan


AS ANCHOVYpopulations pop back up in the coastal waters, humpback whales and other marine mammals
have followed suit, making rare appearances near the coast. Above, a humpback off Santa Barbara in 2001.

Mike EliasonAssociated Press

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