“…In Ensenada de Utría, the signal of upwelled waters during the dry season was evident in the subsurface waters in the middle and outer zones of the cove, where temperature and dissolved oxygen concentrations decreased, and salinity increased. Therefore, subsurface waters in the cove followed the expected seasonal pattern that has been documented in Bahía Culebra in the Gulf of Papagayo, Costa Rica (Alfaro et al, 2012), in coastal waters of the Gulf of Panama (Smayda, 1966;Forsbergh, 1969;D'Croz et al, 1991;D'Croz & Robertson, 1997;D'Croz et al, 2003), and in Bahía Cupica (Jerez-Guerrero et al, 2017) and Isla Gorgona in Colombia (Giraldo, Rodríguez-Rubio, & Zapata, 2008;Valencia & Giraldo, 2012). However, whereas in Bahía Culebra (Rixen et al, 2012) and in Bahía de Panamá (Smayda, 1966;D'Croz & Robertson, 1997) the signal of upwelled waters can be detected at the surface, in Ensenada de Utría surface waters remained warm throughout the study period.…”