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Phytoplankton Responses to Mass Coral Spawning in the Flower Garden Banks, Gulf of MexicoHorne, Courtney Leigh 2011 May 1900 (has links)
Mass coral spawning represents a nutrient input to coral reef systems that for Pacific reefs has been shown to stimulate pelagic and benthic processes. If phytoplankton in the water column over the reef are able to utilize this annual nutrient input, this could potentially alter phytoplankton biomass and community composition, in what is normally a very oligotrophic system. Sampling was performed at East Flower Garden Bank (EFGB), Gulf of Mexico during May, July, and August 2009. The annual
coral spawning event occurred there August 11-14, 2009. Samples were collected morning and evening at three depths and analyzed for nutrients, chlorophyll a, accessory pigments, phytoplankton species composition, and carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen (CHN). During spawning, only small changes in nutrient concentrations were detected. Dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) peaked on the second day of spawning and N:P ratio was highest on 5/28, likely due to particularly phosphate concentration. Chl a biomass was significantly different between sample dates and the biomass increased steadily
throughout the spawning period. The contribution of different phytoplankton classes to total chlorophyll a was determined using known pigment algorithms. Prokaryotes were the dominant class across the entire sampling period with 60-80 percent abundance. Trichodesmium spp. was the dominant genus throughout the study and genus specific changes per sample date were seen. On 8/11 and 8/13 two genera contributed the majority of chl a (Trichodesmium spp. and Ceratium spp.; Cylindrotheca spp. and Trichodesmium spp., respectively). Abundance showed variability during spawning with a peak at 11 cells/ml on 8/12. The high abundance of Trichodesmium spp. could indicate N limitation is alleviated at the Flower Garden Banks (FGB). Current literature on coral spawning is limited to studies performed in the Great Barrier Reef, with assessment areas close to a major shoreline. Genera found at EFGB
were similar to those found in other reef systems. It cannot be determined if nutrient input increased diversity, as diversity was high prior to spawning as well. Greater increase in available forms of nitrogen would have likely been found several days post major spawning. The FGB were a unique system to study, as they are coral reefs, but are located 200 km offshore. This study provided a snapshot into phytoplankton dynamics as a result of spawning. Changes across the short time scale were seen in biomass and community composition.
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Flow-topography interactions, particle transport and plankton dynamics at the Flower Garden Banks: a modeling studyFrancis, Simone 12 April 2006 (has links)
Flow disruption resulting from interactions between currents and abrupt topography
can have important consequences for biological processes in the ocean. A highresolution
three-dimensional hydrodynamic model is used to study topographically
influenced flow at the Flower Garden Banks, two small but thriving coral reef
ecosystems in the northwest Gulf of Mexico. Flow past the modeled banks is
characterized by vortex shedding, turbulent wake formation and strong return velocities
in the near-wake regions. The speed of the oncoming current, strength of water-column
stratification, and level of topographic detail used in the model each serve to modulate
these basic flow characteristics.
Larval retention and dispersal processes at the Flower Garden Banks, and
specifically the dependence of these processes on the nature of flow disruption, are
explored by coupling a Lagrangian particle-tracking algorithm to the hydrodynamic
model. Passive particles released from the tops of the modeled banks as mimics of coral
larvae can remain trapped in the wake regions very close to the banks on time scales of
hours to days, depending primarily on the speed of the free-stream current. Most
particles are swept quickly downstream, however, where their trajectories are most
strongly influenced by the topography of the continental shelf. Modeled dispersal
patterns suggest that there is an ample supply of larvae from the Flower Garden Banks to
nearby oil and gas platforms, which can provide suitable benthic habitat for corals. The flow disturbances generated by the modeled banks result in the mixing of
nutrients from deeper water into shallower, nutrient-depleted layers in the wakes of the
banks. The ability of the planktonic system to respond to such an injection of nutrients is
tested by embedding a simple nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton ecosystem model into
the hydrodynamic model. Plankton biomass in the flow-disturbed wakes is shown to
increase in response to the additional nutrients.
This study shows how flow-topography interactions at the Flower Garden Banks can
exert critical control over local larval transport processes and plankton dynamics. More
generally, it demonstrates the usefulness and feasibility of using numerical models as
tools to uncover important mechanisms of physical-biological interaction in the ocean.
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Reproductive dynamics of coral reef biota at the Flower Gardens /Hagman, Derek Kristian, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 173-201). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
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