In late September 2011, local reports indicated the presence of intense algal blooms along the Southern California coastline. This was followed in early October by an unusual congregation of blue whales feeding near Los Angeles, including shipping lanes where the whales could be at severe risk. The continued presence of these whales indicated a readily available and concentrated food source of krill, small shrimp-like crustaceans. An examination of satellite data available through PO.DAAC provides information on the oceanographic conditions that existed then and how the conditions may have been conducive to intense algal blooms.

Harmful algae blooms are fast growing, dense populations of phytoplankton. The populations can be so dense that in the process of natural decay, oxygen may be depleted from the water which can then harm fish and marine invertebrates. Some forms of phytoplankton produce toxins that are transferred through the food web where they affect marine animals. Red tide is a common name for dense blooms of certain algal species that have red-brown pigments.

Dataset NameProcessing
Level
Start/StopFormatSpatial ResolutionTemporal
Resolution
GHRSST Level 4 MUR Global Foundation Sea Surface Temperature Analysis (v4.1)4 to PresentNETCDF-40.01 Decimal Degrees x 0.01 Decimal DegreesHourly - < Daily
OSCAR third degree resolution ocean surface currents4 to PresentNETCDF-40.33 Decimal Degrees x 0.33 Decimal DegreesDaily - < Weekly