Author/Authors :
José A. Aké-Castillo، نويسنده , , Gabriela Vazquez، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
In tropical and subtropical zones, coastal lagoons are surrounded by mangrove communities which are
a source of high quantity organic matter that enters the aquatic system through litter fall. This organic
matter decomposes, becoming a source of nutrients and other substances such as tannins, fulvic acids
and humic acids that may affect the composition and productivity of phytoplankton communities.
Sontecomapan is a coastal lagoon located in the southern Gulf of Mexico, which receives abundant litter
fall from mangrove. To study the phytoplankton composition and its variation in this lagoon from October
2002 to October 2003, we evaluated the concentrations of dissolved folin phenol active substances
(FPAS) as a measure of plant organic matter, salinity, temperature, pH, O2, N-NH4
þ, N-NO3
, P-PO43 , Si-
SiO2, and phytoplanktonic cell density in different mangrove influence zones including the three main
rivers that feed the lagoon. Nutrients concentrations depended on freshwater from rivers, however these
varied seasonally. Concentrations of P-PO43 , N-NH4
þ and FPAS were the highest in the dry season, when
maximum mangrove litter fall is reported. Variation of these nutrients seemed to depend on the internal
biogeochemical processes of the lagoon. Blooms of diatoms (Skeletonema spp., Cyclotella spp. and
Chaetoceros holsaticus) and dinoflagellates (Peridinium aff. quinquecorne, Prorocentrum cordatum) occurred
seasonally and in the different mangrove influence zones. The high cell densities in these zones
and the occurrence of certain species and its ordination along gradient of FPAS in a canonical correspondence
analysis, suggest that plant organic matter (i.e. mangrove influence) may contribute to
phytoplankton dynamics in Sontecomapan lagoon.