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Bio-optical variability of surface waters in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico

Posted on:2006-03-06Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of South FloridaCandidate:Nababan, BismanFull Text:PDF
GTID:1450390005995874Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
Bio-optical variability of surface waters in Northeastern Gulf of Mexico (NEGOM) was examined using satellite and in situ data. Relatively high chlorophyll-a concentration (chl ≥ 1 mg m-3) and high colored dissolved organic matter (a g443 ≥ 0.1 m-1) were generally observed inshore, near major river mouths, and in plumes of Mississippi River water that extended offshore during the three consecutive summer seasons (1998, 1999, and 2000). River discharge dominated chlorophyll-a concentration variability inshore, particularly near major river mouths. Strong interannual variability in chlorophyll-a concentration was observed inshore from Escambia to Tampa Bay region during the winter to spring transition, which was different in 1998 compared to the winter to spring transition in 1999 and 2000. This was related to higher fresh water discharge during the 1997--1998 El Nino-Southern Oscillation event as well as strong upwelling in spring 1998. The Mississippi plume extended >500 km southeast of the Mississippi delta and up to the Florida Keys was observed for the periods extending over 14 weeks between May and September every year of the study.; In general, ag443 covaried linearly and inversely with salinity inshore during spring and fall, indicating conservative mixing. The NEGOM salinity-ag443 relationship of fall 1998, i.e., Salinity = 36.59--29.86*a g443 (n = 8771, r2 = 0.86; 0.01 ≤ ag443 ≤ 0.52, 16 ≤ S ≤ 36), served as the best predictor of NEGOM salinity based on in situ ag443 observations for spring and fall seasons from all years (<3% mean percentage errors; corresponding to <1.03 psu). This may help estimate salinity from satellite ocean color data, but further testing using data from multiple years is needed to improve such relationship. While river discharge was an important source of colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM), phytoplankton blooms also contributed to CDOM formation in the NEGOM.; Using a pigment index of phytoplankton taxonomic groups, the variability in biomass proportion of microphytoplankton explained up to 76% of the variability of the average of normalized phytoplankton absorption coefficients (545, 625, and 673 nm). The chlorophyll-specific absorption coefficient, a*ph (440), varied by a factor of 7 (0.02--0.15 m2 mg-1). Particle size and pigment composition played important roles in determining a*ph (440) variability. This must be accounted for in chlorophyll- a concentration algorithms based on aph.
Keywords/Search Tags:Variability, NEGOM, Concentration
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