Vertical and Horizontal Distribution Patterns of Copepods Near the Shelf Break South of Nova Scotia

1981 ◽  
Vol 38 (9) ◽  
pp. 1065-1076 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex W. Herman ◽  
Douglas D. Sameoto ◽  
Alan R. Longhurst

The shelf water over the outer edge of the Scotian Shelf and the shelf/slope water front at the shelf break south of Nova Scotia have been sampled with a Batfish cycling over a 3- to 110-m-depth range while measuring salinity, temperature, depth, chlorophyll a, and copepods. Plant production and copepod abundance were much higher at the front than in surrounding shelf and slope waters. Convergence at the front is invoked as a possible transport mechanism which results in the accumulation of copepods in a region of high food concentration. Copepods exhibit diel vertical migration in shelf water but not in the front itself, and possible mechanisms are examined. Most Batfish profiles (with ≈1-m-depth resolution) indicated that the copepod maximum was situated ≈10 m above the chlorophyll maximum. A series of vertical profiles consisting of chlorophyll a, estimated production, and copepod abundances indicate a high correlation between the copepod and production profiles and low correlation between either of these and chlorophyll. Possible relationships between copepod layer depths and the depths of high plant production are considered.Key words: copepods, batfish, chlorophyll, production, front, migration

2003 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 399-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. RIVARO ◽  
R. FRACHE ◽  
A. BERGAMASCO ◽  
R. HOHMANN

A mesoscale experiment was conducted in the Ross Sea near the shelf break in summer 1997–98 within the framework of the activities of the CLIMA Project of the Italian National Program for Antarctic Research (PNRA), focus on study the shelf—slope interaction between the shelf waters and the CDW in correspondence of the Antarctic Slope Front. This paper deals with the dissolved oxygen distribution and with the application of conservative tracers NO and PO related to the physical variables, improving understanding of mixing processes study in correspondence of the shelf break. Experimental data showed the presence of both Ice Shelf Water overflowing the shelf and Circumpolar Deep Water intruding onto the shelf. Dissolved Oxygen (DO), NO and PO resulted useful as chemical tracers in outlining the mixing processes and bottom water formation spreading off continental shelf break of the Ross Sea, in which seems to be evidence that ISW plays an important role. In fact, a plume of ISW was observed flowing down the continental slope to the deep ocean. From chemical tracers we estimate its magnitude to be about 0.4 ± 0.2 Sv.


1979 ◽  
Vol 36 (10) ◽  
pp. 1228-1237 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. O. Fournier ◽  
M. Van Det ◽  
J. S. Wilson ◽  
N. B. Hargreaves

Observations made on the shelf-break front off Nova Scotia during winter on 2 successive yr show the concentration of chlorophyll a in the euphotic zone to be correlated to the inclination of the subsurface front. The steepness of the front influences the depth to which phytoplankton are mixed which in turn controls the average amount of illumination received by a given cell. The two winter observations showed the subsurface front at each of two extremes: vertical with little phytoplankton biomass and almost horizontal with significant quantities of chlorophyll. Calculations were made as to the amount of production enchancement that could result from shallowing of the mixed layer by decreased frontal inclination. They show that during the winter under ideal conditions as few as 35 d of intermittent growth increase annual production in the frontal region by 25%. Key words: front, winter production, phytoplankton, shelf-break, chlorophyll a, frontal oscillations, growth enhancement, stability, stratification


1984 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 294-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Wroblewski ◽  
Jerry Cheney

A warm core ring and adjacent waters off the Scotian Shelf in June 1982 contained substantial numbers of larval and juvenile white hake, Urophycis tenuis, as far as 140 km seaward of the continental shelf break. The warm core ring, designated 81-G, had entrained shelf water on several occasions before the shipboard observations were made. We suggest that the ring contributed to the offshore advection of these fish, which probably were spawned on the continental shelf or upper slope. Warm core rings can disrupt the usual larval drift pattern of shelf–slope fishes and thereby affect recruitment. Larvae and juveniles of several species of tropical–subtropical fishes found in ring 81-G have been reported previously as rare specimens in ichthyoplankton surveys on the Scotian Shelf. Our observations support the hypothesis that warm core rings can be a mechanism for transport of these expatriated fishes onto the shelf.


1996 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 763 ◽  
Author(s):  
EG Abal ◽  
WC Dennison

Correlations between water quality parameters and seagrass depth penetration were developed for use as a biological indicator of integrated light availability and long-term trends in water quality. A year-long water quality monitoring programme in Moreton Bay was coupled with a series of seagrass depth transects. A strong gradient between the western (landward) and eastern (seaward) portions of Moreton Bay was observed in both water quality and seagrass depth range. Higher concentrations of chlorophyll a, total suspended solids, dissolved and total nutrients, and light attenuation coefficients in the water column and correspondingly shallower depth limits of the seagrass Zostera capricorni were observed in the western portions of the bay. Relatively high correlation coefficient values (r2 > 0.8) were observed between light attenuation coefficient, total suspended solids, chlorophyll a, total Kjeldahl nitrogen and Zostera capricorni depth range. Low correlation coefficient values (r2 < 0.8) between seagrass depth range and dissolved inorganic nutrients were observed. Seagrasses had disappeared over a five-year period near the mouth of the Logan River, a turbid river with increased land use in its watershed. At a site 9 km from the river mouth, a significant decrease in seagrass depth range corresponded to higher light attenuation, chlorophyll a, total suspended solids and total nitrogen content relative to a site 21 km from the river mouth. Seagrass depth penetration thus appears to be a sensitive bio-indicator of some water quality parameters, with application for water quality management.


1984 ◽  
Vol 41 (12) ◽  
pp. 1730-1738 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. O. Fournier ◽  
R. Ernst ◽  
N. B. Hargreaves ◽  
M. Van Det ◽  
D. Douglas

Chlorophyll a, nitrate, and physical variables collected during December 1978 and November 1979 off southwest Nova Scotia show two distinct patterns in phytoplankton abundance. In December 1978, conditions were similar to those expected in late fall over temperate North American shelves. The water was well mixed and chlorophyll was at background level (~0.5 mg/m3). By contrast, in November 1979, both inshore and offshore regions were stratified, and chlorophyll levels were, in some places, 5 times above background. Two explanations are offered for this bimodal chlorophyll distribution. Offshore, temporary stratification resulted from the intrusion of warm saline water from either the slope or the Gulf of Maine. This may be a temporary condition that eventually deteriorates with seasonal cooling and convective mixing. Inshore, stratification results from the influx of a shallow layer of relatively low-salinity water carried by the Nova Scotia current. The onset and seasonal vagaries of this current help to explain differences observed in 1978 and 1979.


1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 315-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
JoséI. Carreto ◽  
Vivian A. Lutz ◽  
Marco O. Carignan ◽  
Angel D. Cucchi Colleoni ◽  
Silvia G. De Marco
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 18211-18252 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Martín ◽  
X. Durrieu de Madron ◽  
P. Puig ◽  
F. Bourrin ◽  
A. Palanques ◽  
...  

Abstract. Cap de Creus Canyon (CCC) is known as a preferential conduit for particulate matter leaving the Gulf of Lion continental shelf towards the slope and the deep basin, particularly in winter when storms and dense shelf water cascading coalesce to enhance the seaward export of shelf waters. During the CASCADE (CAscading, Storm, Convection, Advection and Downwelling Events) cruise in March 2011, deployments of recording instruments within the canyon and vertical profiling of the water column properties were conducted to study with high spatial-temporal resolution the impact of such processes on particulate matter fluxes. In the context of a mild and wet 2010–2011 winter, no remarkable dense shelf water formation was observed. On the other hand, the experimental setup allowed to study the impact of E-SE storms on the hydrographical structure and the particulate matter fluxes in the CCC. The most remarkable feature in terms of sediment transport was a period of dominant E-SE winds from 12 to 16 March, including two moderate storms of significant wave heights = 4–4.5 m. During this period, a plume of freshened, relatively cold and turbid water flowed at high speeds along the southern flank of CCC in an approximate depth range of 150–350 m. The density of this water mass only reached ~ 28.78 kg m−3, indicating that it did not cascade into the canyon and that merely downwelled into it forced by the accumulation of seawater along the coast during the storms and by the subsequent strong cyclonic circulation induced over the shelf. Suspended sediment load in this turbid intrusion was comparable at three heights above bottom where turbidimeters were installed (10, 75 and 115 m above bottom) on the southern canyon flank and oscillated between 10 and 50 mg L−1. Current speeds were also comparable in the depth range profiled by ADCPs (40 to 150 mab) and reached values up to 90 cm s−1 during the peak of the strongest storm (13 March, Hs = 4.5 m). Sediment transport at 75 mab on the southern canyon flank was estimated at 1–1.5 t m−2 for the entire deployment while very close to the bottom (5 m above) in the canyon head it was less than 0.6 t m−2 during the same period. We provide a rough estimation of 105 t of sediment transported through the canyon along its southern wall during a 3 day-long period of storm-induced downwelling. Following the veering of the wind direction (from SE to NW) on 16 March, downwelling ceased, currents inside the canyon reversed from down to up-canyon, and the turbid shelf plume was evacuated from the canyon, most probably flowing along the southern canyon flank and being entrained by the general SW circulation after leaving the canyon confinement. This study highlights that remarkable sediment transport occurs in the CCC, and particularly along its southern flank, even during mild and wet winters, in absence of cascading and under limited external forcing. The sediment transport associated to eastern storms like the ones described in this paper tends to enter the canyon by its downstream flank, partially affecting the canyon head region. Sediment transport during these events is not constrained near the seafloor but distributed in a depth range of 200–300 m above the bottom. Our paper broadens the understanding of the complex set of atmosphere-driven sediment transport processes acting in this highly dynamic area of the northwestern Mediterranean Sea.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 1405-1437
Author(s):  
L. Zhao ◽  
X. Guo

Abstract. A three dimensional coupled biophysical model was used to examine the supply of oceanic nutrients to the shelf of the East China Sea (ECS) and its role in primary production over the shelf. The model consisted of two modules: the hydrodynamic module was based on a nested model with a horizontal resolution of 1/18 degree, whereas the biological module was a low trophic level ecosystem model including two types of phytoplankton, three elements of nutrients, and biogenic organic material. Model results suggested that seasonal variation in chlorophyll-a had a strong regional dependence over the shelf of the ECS. The area with high chlorophyll-a appears firstly at the outer shelf in winter, and gradually migrates toward the inner shelf (offshore region of Changjiang estuary) from spring to summer. Vertically, chlorophyll-a was generally homogenous from the coastal zone to the inner shelf. In the middle and outer shelves, high chlorophyll-a appeared in the surface in spring but moved to the subsurface from summer to early autumn. The annual averaged onshore flux across the shelf break was estimated to be 1.53 Sv for volume, 9.4 kmol s−1 for DIN, 0.7 kmol s−1 for DIP, and 18.2 kmol s−1 for silicate, which are supplied mainly from the northeast of Taiwan and southwest of Kyushu. From calculations that artificially increased the concentration of nutrients in the Kuroshio water, the additional oceanic nutrients were distributed in the bottom layer from the shelf break to the region offshore of Changjiang estuary from spring to summer, and appeared in the surface layer from autumn to winter. The contribution of oceanic nutrients to primary production over the shelf was found not only in the surface layer (mainly at the outer shelf and shelf break in winter and in the region offshore of Changjiang estuary in summer) but also in the subsurface layer over the shelf from spring to autumn.


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