• Title of article

    Summer algal blooms in a coastal ecosystem: the role of atmospheric deposition versus entrainment fluxes

  • Author/Authors

    Jacob Carstensen، نويسنده , , Lise Marie Frohn، نويسنده , , Charlotte Bay Hasager، نويسنده , , BO G. GUSTAFSSON ، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    595
  • To page
    608
  • Abstract
    The nitrogen inputs from atmospheric deposition and bottom water entrainment to the surface layer were modelled in the summer period (May–September) over a 11-year period (1989–1999) and compared to investigate the significance of these fluxes for generating blooms in the Kattegat. In the summer periods the average atmospheric deposition was 2.81 mg N m−2 d−1 compared to average entrainment fluxes of 5.42 mg N m−2 d−1, 1.21 mg N m−2 d−1 and 1.15 mg N m−2 d−1 for the northern, central and southern part of the Kattegat, respectively. Atmospheric nitrogen deposition alone could not sustain biomass increases associated with observed blooms and entrainment fluxes dominated the high nitrogen inputs to the surface layer. The potential for a bloom through growth was typically obtained after several days of high nitrogen inputs from entrainment in the frontal area of the northern Kattegat and to some extent from atmospheric deposition. The modelled nitrogen input in this area could account directly for 30% of the observed blooms in the Northern sub-basin, and through advective transport 24% and 19% of the observed blooms in the central and southern Kattegat. The direct nitrogen inputs through atmospheric deposition and entrainment to the central and southern sub-basins were small and could not be linked to any bloom observation.
  • Keywords
    nitrogen pulses , Frontal systems , Advective transport , eutrophication , upwelling , The Kattegat
  • Journal title
    Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
  • Record number

    952951