The effects of a winter upwelling on biogeochemical and planktonic components in an area close to the Galician upwelling core: The sound of Corcubión (NW Spain)

13 páginas, 9 figuras, 2 tablas To study the biogeochemical response and the coupling plankton–benthos to an unusual winter upwelling event a cruise was carried out in February 2005 in the Sound of Corcubión, near Cape Finisterre (NW Iberian Peninsula), the Galician upwelling core. This area represe...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Sea Research
Main Authors: Varela, Manuel, Álvarez-Ossorio, M. Teresa, Bode, Antonio, Prego, R., Bernárdez, Patricia, García-Soto, Carlos
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/54929
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.seares.2010.03.004
Description
Summary:13 páginas, 9 figuras, 2 tablas To study the biogeochemical response and the coupling plankton–benthos to an unusual winter upwelling event a cruise was carried out in February 2005 in the Sound of Corcubión, near Cape Finisterre (NW Iberian Peninsula), the Galician upwelling core. This area represents the northern boundary of the Eastern North Atlantic Upwelling System (ENAUS). The spatial distribution of plankton assemblages (phytoplankton and zooplankton), chlorophyll, physical and chemical parameters as well as diatom distribution in surface sediments, were studied in a total of 17 stations in the Sound. The upwelling processes caused an important accumulation of water in the inner Sound and near the Cape. This accumulation zone must be persistent through the upwelling events in the area, including those of summer, as indicated by the diatoms' distribution in the sediment. Unlike the summer upwelling events, the main effect of winter upwelling in the area is the increase in solar radiation due to the persistent clear skies. In this season nutrient supply is not critical due to water column mixing. The meteorological conditions were equivalent to those of early spring. As a result, both phyto- and zooplankton species assemblages were typical of spring blooms in Galician coasts. The bloom lasted for up to 6 days, as estimated from the availability and uptake of nitrogen forms. Winter blooms represented ca. 20% of total annual phytoplankton biomass, and 30% of the average biomass during summer upwelling, in the period 1997–2007, as estimated from the analysis of both, in situ and satellite derived chlorophyll This study has been funded in part by the Spanish CICYT Project “Reconocimiento Oceanográfico en la época de floración primaveral en la zona de Cabo Finisterre (Galicia, Costa de LaMuerte) en relación con el vertido del Prestige”, by REFORZA Project (Xunta de Galicia, Local Government, ref. PGIDIT06RMA6040IPR) and by funds of the Instituto Español de Oceanografía. Peer reviewed