Document of bibliographic reference 287285

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Physical, biochemical and biological characterization of two opposite areas in the southern Adriatic Sea (Mediterranean Sea)
Abstract
The Drini and Manfredonia Gulfs were investigated in May 2008 and April 2009, respectively. The gulfs are located in the South Eastern (Gulf of Drini) and South Western (Gulf of Manfredonia) Adriatic Sea. The areas are partially influenced by two main Adriatic surface currents: the Eastern Adriatic Current-EAC that flows north-westward along the eastern side, and the Western Adriatic Current—WAC that flows south-eastward along the western side of the basin. The spatial variations of temperature, salinity, fluorescence, dissolved oxygen concentration, Coloured Dissolved Organic Matter—CDOM, nutrients, chlorophyll a and phytoplankton composition parameters in the two areas were observed and compared. CDOM regulates the penetration of UV light into the sea and plays an important role in many hydrological and biogeochemical processes on the sea surface layer including primary productivity. The phytoplankton specific diversity of the Gulf of Manfredonia showed a spring community with dinoflagellates (21 taxa) as the main important fraction, coccolithophorales (6 taxa) and diatoms with 10 identified taxa. The phytoplankton distribution along the eastern coast showed a different biodiversity: a prevalence of dinoflagellates (58 taxa) included harmful microalgae such as Alexandrium, Dinophysis and Lingulodinium genus. Diatoms were less abundant, among them Pseudo-nitzschia was also reported which could include some potentially toxic species. Nanoplankton are ever abundant in offshore waters and an exceptional bloom of cyanobacteria was registered in Buna-Boyana estuary due to strong industrial impact. The gulfs showed similar physical and biochemical characteristics despite the WAC carried out along the western Adriatic Sea the water rich in nutrients from the major northern Italian rivers. No correlations were found between CDOM and chlorophyll a in the two areas and this implied that, probably, the primary source of CDOM might come from terrestrial input rather than the biological production from phytoplankton. The Gulf of Drini is impacted by the runoff of the Buna-Bojana River that makes this gulf an eutrophic area despite the mostly eastern side of the Adriatic being an oligotrophic basin.
Bibliographic citation
Campanelli, A.; Cabrini, M.; Grilli, F.; Fornasaro, D.; Penna, P.; Kljajic, Z.; Marini, M. (2013). Physical, biochemical and biological characterization of two opposite areas in the southern Adriatic Sea (Mediterranean Sea). Open Journal of Marine Science 3(2): 120-131. https://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojms.2013.32013
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Alessandra Campanelli
author
Name
Marina Cabrini
author
Name
Federica Grilli
author
Name
Daniela Fornasaro
author
Name
Pierluigi Penna
author
Name
Zoran Kljajic
author
Name
Mauro Marini

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojms.2013.32013

thesaurus terms

term
Dissolved organic matter (term code: 2380 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Phytoplankton (term code: 6208 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Temperature (term code: 8411 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)

Document metadata

date created
2017-07-28
date modified
2017-07-28