Title of article :
Correspondence between the distribution of hydrodynamic time parameters and the distribution of biological and chemical variables in a semi-enclosed coral reef lagoon
Author/Authors :
Jean-Pascal Torréton، نويسنده , , Emma Rochelle-Newall، نويسنده , , Aymeric Jouon، نويسنده , , Vincent Faure، نويسنده , , Séverine Jacquet، نويسنده , , Pascal Douillet، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Hydrodynamic modeling can be used to spatially characterize water renewal rates in coastal ecosystems. Using a hydrodynamic model
implemented over the semi-enclosed Southwest coral lagoon of New Caledonia, a recent study computed the flushing lag as the minimum
time required for a particle coming from outside the lagoon (open ocean) to reach a specific station [Jouon, A., Douillet, P., Ouillon, S., Fraunie´,
P., 2006. Calculations of hydrodynamic time parameters in a semi-opened coastal zone using a 3D hydrodynamic model. Continental Shelf
Research 26, 1395e1415]. Local e-flushing time was calculated as the time requested to reach a local grid mesh concentration of 1/e from
the precedent step. Here we present an attempt to connect physical forcing to biogeochemical functioning of this coastal ecosystem. An array
of stations, located in the lagoonal channel as well as in several bays under anthropogenic influence, was sampled during three cruises. We then
tested the statistical relationships between the distribution of flushing indices and those of biological and chemical variables. Among the variables
tested, silicate, chlorophyll a and bacterial biomass production present the highest correlations with flushing indices. Correlations are
higher with local e-flushing times than with flushing lags or the sum of these two indices. In the bays, these variables often deviate from the
relationships determined in the main lagoon channel. In the three bays receiving significant riverine inputs, silicate is well above the regression
line, whereas data from the bay receiving almost insignificant freshwater inputs generally fit the lagoon channel regressions. Moreover, in the
three bays receiving important urban and industrial effluents, chlorophyll a and bacterial production of biomass generally display values exceeding
the lagoon channel regression trends whereas in the bay under moderate anthropogenic influence values follow the regressions obtained in
the lagoon channel. The South West lagoon of New Caledonia can hence be viewed as a coastal mesotrophic ecosystem that is flushed by
oligotrophic oceanic waters which subsequently replace the lagoonal waters with water considerably impoverished in resources for microbial
growth. This flushing was high enough during the periods of study to influence the distribution of phytoplankton biomass, bacterial production
of biomass and silicate concentrations in the lagoon channel as well as in some of the bay areas.
Keywords :
Hydrodynamics , flushing time , Plankton , Secondary production , New Caledonia , Coastal lagoon , Pacific , nutrients
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science