Title of article :
Cross-shelf transport of sub-thermocline nitrate by the internal tide and rapid (3–6 h) incorporation by an inshore macroalga
Author/Authors :
Lydia B. Ladah، نويسنده , , Lydia B. and Filonov، نويسنده , , Anatoliy and Lavيn، نويسنده , , Miguel F. and Leichter، نويسنده , , James J. and Zertuche-Gonzلlez، نويسنده , , José A. and Pérez-Mayorga، نويسنده , , Diana M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
10
From page :
10
To page :
19
Abstract :
During summer in shallow waters off Baja California, Mexico, the internal tide is a dominant thermal feature of the water column. However, its importance for sub-thermocline nutrient provision to benthic macroalgae is unknown. In order to determine if internal motions provide nutrients to macroalgae in summer, Ulva lactuca was outplanted at inshore stations for short (3 and 6 h) intervals, at the surface, 5 and 10 m depth, and tissue nitrogen content was measured before and after each deployment. Concurrently temperature, currents, and nutrients were measured using moored thermistors, current profilers, CTDs, Niskin bottles, and an in-situ UV absorbance nitrate sensor (ISUS). Discrete pulses of cool, nutrient-rich water were horizontally displaced at least 4 km on the shelf and shoaled more than 20 m depth at the semidiurnal frequency, resulting in more than a 10-fold change in the concentration of nitrate. Inshore, tissue nitrogen of Ulva outplants increased significantly during longer exposures to this cool water. At this site, the semidiurnal signal dominates water column temperature fluctuations from April to November, with summer showing the greatest cooling (up to 5 °C) in a one-hour period. We estimated that 11% of the days of a year show internal waves that would cause a significant change in nutrient availability to macroalgae at 5 m depth. This study supports the hypothesis that nitrate can reach and be rapidly incorporated by inshore macroalgae such as Ulva through transport forced by the internal tide, and that even very short (<1 h) nutrient pulses in nature are reflected in macroalgal tissue. We propose that at this site, the internal tide provides a significant, yet understudied, high frequency nutrient source to inshore primary producers, particularly in summer.
Keywords :
Internal Waves , Ulva , nutrient transport , Macroalgae
Journal title :
Continental Shelf Research
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Continental Shelf Research
Record number :
2297460
Link To Document :
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