Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9480756 | Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science | 2005 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
The first oceanographic research (hydrography, nutrient salts, chlorophyll, primary production and phytoplankton assemblages) in a Middle Galician Ria was carried out in Corme-Laxe during 2001, just a year before the Prestige oil spill, being the only reference to evaluate eventual changes in the phytoplankton community. Due to the small size of this ria (6.5 km2), oceanographic processes were driven by the continental water supplied by Anllons River during the wet season (20-30 m3 sâ1 in winter), and the strong oceanic influence from the nearby shelf during the dry season. The annual cycle showed a spring bloom with high levels of chlorophyll (up to 14 μg Chl-a Lâ1) and primary production (3 g C mâ2 dâ1) and a summer upwelling bloom (up to 8 μg Chl-a Lâ1 and 10 g C mâ2 dâ1) where the proximity of the Galician upwelling core (<13.5 °C at sea surface) favors the input of upwelled seawater (up to 9 μM of nitrate and silicate) to the bottom ria layer, even during summer stratification events (primary production around 2 g C mâ2 dâ1). Thus, phytoplankton assemblages form a “continuum” from spring to autumn with a predominance of diatoms and overlapping species between consecutive periods; only in autumn dinoflagellates and flagellates characterized the phytoplankton community. In the Middle Rias as Corme-Laxe, the nutrient values, Chl-a, primary production and phytoplankton abundance for productive periods were higher than those reported for the Northern (Ria of A Coruña) and Southern Rias (Ria of Arousa) for year 2001; this suggests the importance of the hydrographic events occurring in the zone of maximum upwelling intensity of the Western Iberian Shelf, where a lack of annual cycles studies exists.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Manuel Varela, Ricardo Prego, Yolanda Pazos, Ángeles Moroño,