Environmental forcing on phytoplankton biomass and primary productivity of the coastal ecosystem in Ubatuba region, southern Brazil

Authors

  • Salvador Airton Gaeta Fundação de Estudos e Pesquisas Aquáticas - FUNDESP
  • Sylvia Maria Susini Ribeiro Universidade de São Paulo; Instituto Oceanográfico
  • Patricia Mercedes Metzler Universidade de São Paulo; Instituto Oceanográfico
  • Maria Solange Francos Universidade de São Paulo; Instituto Oceanográfico
  • Donato Seiji Abe Instituto Internacional de Ecologia - IIE

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1679-87591999000100002

Keywords:

Chlorophyll a, Primary productivity, Time series, Ubatuba coastal waters

Abstract

A time series of chlorophyll a and in situ primary production sampled over a period of 33 days during summer in Ubatuba region, southeastem Brazil, was subjected to multivariate and harmonic analysis. Principal Component Analysis has revealed four factors interpreted as (i) South Atlantic Central Water forcing; (ii) Transient ftontal systems and rain fali forcings; (iii) Wind forcing normal to the coast; (iv) Wind forcing parallel to the coast, as main factors in the variability of the phytoplankton biomass and primary productivity. Splitting of the time series according to four main events which had profound effects on the physicochemical characteristics of the region showed the following variations in the primary productivity integrated over the photic layer (g C m-2 day-1): mixing→stratification period, 0.40 ± 0.11; heavy rainfall, 1.24± 0.28; stratification after rainfall, 0.74± 0.10; stratification→mixing period, 0.90± 0.27; stratification after deep mixing, 0.63 ± 0.28. Harmonic analysis revealed two indistinguishable significant peaks of the phytoplankton biomass - one at a period of 8.25 days and one at a period of 6.6 days, contributing, respectively, about 17 and 32% ofthe total variance. Atmospheric forcing showed a characteristic period,of 200-264 hours while phytoplankton biomass response ranged over the 144-192 hours time scales and primary productivity was best related to the environment 360 hours before. Relative to total nitrogen' and ' biomass primary productivity oscillations were lagged about 96-144 hours. The interruption of steady-state conditions by transient atmospheric ev~nts and wind field intensification are the determining factors driving phytoplankton changes in this coastal environment.

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Published

1999-01-01

Issue

Section

Research Articles