SEASONAL CYCLES AND THEIR SPATIAL VARIABILITY

Citation
Mj. Howarth et al., SEASONAL CYCLES AND THEIR SPATIAL VARIABILITY, Philosophical transactions-Royal Society of London. Physical sciences and engineering, 343(1669), 1993, pp. 383-403
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
ISSN journal
09628428
Volume
343
Issue
1669
Year of publication
1993
Pages
383 - 403
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8428(1993)343:1669<383:SCATSV>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Seasonal variations dominate many processes in continental shelf seas. A comprehensive coherent inter-disciplinary data set for one seasonal cycle was obtained by repeating the same cruise track in the southern North Sea at monthly intervals from August 1988 to October 1989. Meas urements were made throughout the water column in vertically homogeneo us and summer stratified regions and near the major estuaries. 97 % of the surface temperature's variance was in the seasonal cycle, driven by solar forcing; spatial variability was related to stratification an d to contrasts between the waters off northeast England and the German Bight. The salinity seasonal cycle was small; spatial variability was governed by fresh water river inputs. Suspended sediment concentratio ns were largest near river mouths and coasts; material was transported eastward from East Anglia towards the German Bight in a distinct plum e whose magnitude varied with seasonal wind patterns. There were large regional differences, with the greatest phytoplankton biomass and oxy gen supersaturation developing in the Southern Bight and German Bight, those regions which experience extensive phytoplankton blooms in the spring. Annual primary productivity ranged from 79 gC m-2 a-1 for the English coastal region to 261 gC M-2 a-1 for the German Bight. Low oxy gen concentrations were measured in late summer below the thermocline in regions on either side of the Dogger Bank. A budget of nutrient con centrations throughout the region suggests that nutrient supply to the phytoplankton in the winter is dominated by regeneration processes, r ather than input from river run-off.