Interannual monsoon wind variability as a key driver of East African small pelagic fisheries

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Abstract

Small pelagic fisheries provide food security, livelihood support and economic stability for East African coastal communities—a region of least developed countries. Using remotely- sensed and field observations together with modelling, we address the biophysical drivers of this important resource. We show that annual variations of fisheries yield parallel those of chlorophyll-a (an index of phytoplankton biomass). While enhanced phytoplankton biomass during the Northeast monsoon is triggered by wind-driven upwelling, during the Southeast monsoon, it is driven by two current induced mechanisms: coastal “dynamic uplift” upwelling; and westward advection of nutrients. This biological response to the Southeast monsoon is greater than that to the Northeast monsoon. For years unaffected by strong El-Niño/La-Niña events, the Southeast monsoon wind strength over the south tropical Indian Ocean is the main driver of year-to-year variability. This has important implications for the predictability of fisheries yield, its response to climate change, policy and resource management.

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Jebri, F., Jacobs, Z. L., Raitsos, D. E., Srokosz, M., Painter, S. C., Kelly, S., … Popova, E. (2020). Interannual monsoon wind variability as a key driver of East African small pelagic fisheries. Scientific Reports, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-70275-9

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