![]()
Quarterdeck 3.2
Recent Graduate
by Paula Bontempi
[77K] Surface salinity recorded in the Gulf of Mexico during the May 1993 LATEX A hydrography cruise. Compared to 1992, fresher water extends farther out to sea due to the record flows of the Mississippi and Atchafalaya Rivers.
The Texas-Louisiana shelf is divided into the inner, middle, and outer
regions based on hydrography, physical processes, and phytoplankton regimes.
During the spring of 1992 and 1993, the inner shelf had the highest overall
concentrations of nutrients and phytoplankton. These high numbers were due
to the influence of river-borne nutrient loads and some advected nutrients
from the seafloor. The majority of the phytoplankton population was composed
of diatoms.
At the sea surface above the middle and outer regions of the shelf, the
water column was oligotrophic, or nutrient-poor. In this environment smaller,
more motile cells dominated. Motile dinoflagellates and micro-flagellates
can migrate into light-filled or nutrient-rich areas. They may be small
cells which have lower nutrient requirements, as are the majority of coccolithophorids
found on the shelf in the spring. At the chlorophyll maximum of the middle
shelf (40 to 50 meters deep), the depth at which the concentration of chlorophyll
is the greatest, regeneration of nutrients from the seafloor and advection
of these nutrients into the upper water column probably helped sup-port
the phytoplankton population. At the outer-shelf chlorophyll maximum (55
to 70 meters deep), upwelling of nutrient-rich waters into the oligotrophic
upper water column may have supported the phytoplankton population.
Major differences were found in the springtime phytoplankton regimes of
the flood year (1993) and the average flow year (1992). In May 1993, the
area occupied by lower-salinity river water could be identified based on
the location of greater phytoplankton abundances at the surface and chlorophyll
maximum. There was a shift in dominant diatom species from Leptocylindrus
danicus Cleve and Rhizosolenia delicatula Cleve in 1992 to Skeletonema
costatum (Greville) Grunow in 1993. This shift was influenced by the
radical change in the shelf environment, particularly salinity and nutrients,
caused by the increased volume of fresh water. The May 1993 shelf environment
favored the dominance of the more cosmopolitan species, Skeletonema costatum.
During both years, tychopelagic diatoms were found in the upper water column
on the middle shelf. A tychopelagic diatom spends most of its life cycle
attached to a bottom substrate until forcibly torn from it. Their presence
in the middle-shelf water column supported the hypothesis that resuspension
of nutrients from the seafloor helped maintain the phyto-plankton population
there.
Hydrographic and physical data for this research were supplied by the Louisiana-Texas
Shelf Physical Oceanography Program (LATEX), funded by the Minerals Management
Service. The complementary phytoplankton study is funded by the Office of
Naval Research. Researchers at the University of Georgia and the University
of Southern Mississippi are developing a coupled biological and physical
model to enable prediction of seasonal phytoplankton biomass and species
diversity on the Texas-Louisiana shelf based on different flow regimes of
the Mississippi River.
Oceanography, Texas A&M
University
URL=http://oceanography.tamu.edu/Quarterdeck/QD3.2/Bontempi/bontempi.html
Updated September 14, 1995