The near-surface circulation in the Santa Barbara Channel and off the coast of central and southern California is described based on 20 releases of drifters
drogued 1 m beneath the surface from 12 sites within the channel at bimonthly
intervals. This description includes small-scale features of the circulation which are
not part of descriptions based on moored observations or of the statistics of the
drifter releases. The eventual fate of drifters at long time intervals compared to the
residence time in the channel (about 7 days) is also included. In the channel the
trajectories document a persistent cyclonic circulation with a typical recirculation
period between 3 and 5 days. In the spring, currents near the mainland are
weaker than near the Channel Islands, and the overall flow is toward the southeast.
Trajectories document the possibility for water parcels to leave the channel through
the interisland passes. In the late fall and winter a poleward flow with velocities
often exceeding 0.5 m s¯¹ is confined within 20 km of the mainland. Between
these two seasons the cyclonic tendency is enhanced, although most of the drifters
eventually migrate westward. The trajectories of drifters released at the same
time from sites only 20 km apart can be remarkably different. Once the drifters
migrate out of the channel, their trajectories can be grouped into a few patterns.
In spring and summer, drifters tend to remain in the Southern California Bight.
Their trajectories often remain close over extended periods, as if they were caught
in convergence zones. In fall the drifters often are caught in a poleward current