“…The study area located near the northern limit of the ETP (Figure ) is characterized as an oceanographic transition zone with highly variable, mixed water conditions resulting from the convergence of three ocean currents: the California current (low temperature and salinity), the Costa Rica coastal current (warm temperature, low density, and northward flow), and the Gulf of California current (cold temperature, high density, and southward transport; Pennington et al., ; Wyrtki, ). In the study area, the maximum and minimum annual sea temperatures and salinity range 18–35°C and 32.7–37.1, respectively, with a thermocline at 20–40 m. Seasonal upwelling occurs from December to April (Palacios‐Hernández, Carrillo, Filonov, Brito‐Castillo, & Cabrera Ramos, ; Shea, Trenberth, & Reynolds, ). The region is influenced by ENSO events, which generate positive and negative temperature anomalies that have caused mass coral bleaching events with a high mortality rate (Glynn, ; Glynn & Ault, ; Kessler, ; Reyes‐Bonilla et al., ).…”