Elemental composition of suspended particles across the southeastern continental shelf off the coast of North Florida and South Georgia: Provenance, transport, fate and implications to mid-outer shelf water column processes.

2019 ◽  
Vol 178 ◽  
pp. 27-40
Author(s):  
Herbert L. Windom
2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 6605-6635 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Yasuki ◽  
K. Suzuki ◽  
A. Tsuda

Abstract. Typhoons can induce vertical mixing, upwelling, or both in the water column due to strong wind stress. These events can induce phytoplankton blooms in the oligotrophic ocean after typhoon passage. However, little is known about the responses of lower trophic-level organisms or changes in the community structure following the passage of typhoons, particularly in offshore regions. Therefore, we evaluated community succession on the outer shelf of the East China Sea through on-deck bottle incubation experiments simulating hydrographic conditions after the passage of a typhoon. Under all of the experimental conditions we tested, chlorophyll a concentrations increased more than 9-fold within 6 days, and these algal cells were mainly composed of large diatoms (>10 μm). Ciliates also increased along with the diatom bloom. These results suggest that increases in diatom and ciliate populations may enhance biogenic carbon export in the water column. Typhoons can affect not only phytoplankton productivity, but also the composition of lower trophic-level organisms and biogeochemical processes in oligotrophic offshore regions.


1996 ◽  
Vol 74 (8) ◽  
pp. 1485-1496 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. McConnell ◽  
M. A. Fedak

Twelve southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) were tracked for an average of 119 days as they left their breeding or moulting beaches on the island of South Georgia between 1990 and 1994. Females travelled either eastward up to 3000 km away to the open Southern Ocean or to the continental shelf on or near the Antarctic Peninsula. Males either stayed close to South Georgia or used South Georgia as a base for shorter trips. The females all left South Georgia in a directed manner at an average rate of 79.4 km/day over at least the first 15 days. Thereafter travel was interrupted by bouts of slower travel or stationary phases. The latter were localized at sites on the continental shelf or along its edge. Three seals that were tracked over more than one season repeated their outward direction of travel and used some of the same sites in subsequent years. The magnitude of the movements makes most of the Southern Ocean potentially available to elephant seals.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (16) ◽  
pp. 4973-4993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Schlosser ◽  
Katrin Schmidt ◽  
Alfred Aquilina ◽  
William B. Homoky ◽  
Maxi Castrillejo ◽  
...  

Abstract. The island of South Georgia is situated in the iron (Fe)-depleted Antarctic Circumpolar Current of the Southern Ocean. Iron emanating from its shelf system fuels large phytoplankton blooms downstream of the island, but the actual supply mechanisms are unclear. To address this, we present an inventory of Fe, manganese (Mn), and aluminium (Al) in shelf sediments, pore waters, and the water column in the vicinity of South Georgia, alongside data on zooplankton-mediated Fe cycling processes, and provide estimates of the relative dissolved Fe (DFe) fluxes from these sources. Seafloor sediments, modified by authigenic Fe precipitation, were the main particulate Fe source to shelf bottom waters as indicated by the similar Fe ∕ Mn and Fe ∕ Al ratios for shelf sediments and suspended particles in the water column. Less than 1 % of the total particulate Fe pool was leachable surface-adsorbed (labile) Fe and therefore potentially available to organisms. Pore waters formed the primary DFe source to shelf bottom waters, supplying 0.1–44 µmol DFe m−2 d−1. However, we estimate that only 0.41±0.26 µmol DFe m−2 d−1 was transferred to the surface mixed layer by vertical diffusive and advective mixing. Other trace metal sources to surface waters included glacial flour released by melting glaciers and via zooplankton egestion and excretion processes. On average 6.5±8.2 µmol m−2 d−1 of labile particulate Fe was supplied to the surface mixed layer via faecal pellets formed by Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), with a further 1.1±2.2 µmol DFe m−2 d−1 released directly by the krill. The faecal pellets released by krill included seafloor-derived lithogenic and authigenic material and settled algal debris, in addition to freshly ingested suspended phytoplankton cells. The Fe requirement of the phytoplankton blooms ∼ 1250 km downstream of South Georgia was estimated as 0.33±0.11 µmol m−2 d−1, with the DFe supply by horizontal/vertical mixing, deep winter mixing, and aeolian dust estimated as ∼0.12 µmol m−2 d−1. We hypothesize that a substantial contribution of DFe was provided through recycling of biogenically stored Fe following luxury Fe uptake by phytoplankton on the Fe-rich shelf. This process would allow Fe to be retained in the surface mixed layer of waters downstream of South Georgia through continuous recycling and biological uptake, supplying the large downstream phytoplankton blooms.


2002 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa Serra ◽  
Xavier Casamitjana ◽  
Jordi Colomer ◽  
Timothy C. Granata

An in situ laser particle size analyzer (LISST-100, Sequoia Scientific, Inc.) has been used to study the particle size distribution and concentration of biological and non biological particles in the water column of a Mediterranean coastal system. Two field campaigns have been carried out during low and high energy conditions of the flow, caused by the passage of a storm front. For the low energy period, the water column remained stratified, whereas for the high energetic period the water column was warmer and well mixed. The first study dealt with the distribution of particles near the bottom of the coastal area. Here, two regions were taken into account. The first region was a sea-grass meadow of Posidonia oceanica and the second region was a barren sand area. The second study dealt with the determination of the vertical distribution of suspended particles in the whole water column of the system. The results showed a decrease in the vertical concentration of suspended particles in the water column with the passage of the storm front, which was associated with advection of warm water mass rather than by vertical mixing. In contrast, vertical resuspension determined the fate of suspended particles at the bottom of the water column and an increase of their concentration was found.


2010 ◽  
Vol 61 (5) ◽  
pp. 625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jim Greenwood

Increased biological and chemical reaction rates within permeable continental-shelf sediment can result from the action of passing surface waves, especially when the seabed is rippled. The effect of this on the exchange of nitrogen between the sediment and water column is the focus of the present paper. The continental shelf of Western Australia is used as an example. A time series of chlorophyll a is compared with surface-wave height revealing seasonal and sub-seasonal correlation between the two variables. At the same time, results from a coupled pelagic–benthic biogeochemical model show that temperature-controlled changes in sedimentary nitrogen efflux cannot account for the observed seasonal changes in chlorophyll a in the overlying water column. It is proposed that enhanced pore-water circulation within the sediment, caused by the action of passing surface waves, results in an increase in the efflux of nitrogen from the sediment during winter, supporting higher pelagic phytoplankton production. The parameterisation of sedimentary nitrogen mineralisation as a function of the square of wave height is suggested for the inclusion of this effect in regional-scale continental shelf models.


2000 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberley A. Smith

Distributions of small and large larvae of Centroberyx affinis (Berycidae) and Gonorynchus greyi (Gonorynchidae) were examined along a shore-normal transect across the Sydney continental shelf, south-eastern Australia during January and April 1994. Both species were abundant, and 3016 individuals of C. affinis and 3184 individuals of G. greyi were taken. Distributions of small and large C. affinis reflected hydrographic variability and suggested passive dispersal. Previous observations of high year-class variability for this species may therefore reflect oceanographic variability during the larval stage. In contrast, the distributions of G. greyi only partially reflected hydrography and appeared to be influenced by larval behaviour at both sizes. Size distributions during each month indicated protracted spawning periods for both species. Spawning by C. affinis may have occurred over the inner shelf although the location was unclear because of the complexity of nearshore currents. Spawning by G. greyi probably occurred over the outer shelf. An increasing influence of larval behaviour with larval size on the distribution of G. greyi restricted larger individuals to the shelf break; this may have been a response to higher productivity in this region.


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