The species composition and numerical abundance of siphonophores were studi
ed in the southern Gulf of Mexico from epipelagic zooplankton samples colle
cted during July, 1988. Thirty-one species of Siphonophora were recorded at
97 stations, with Muggiaea kochi, Diphyes dispar, Bassia bassensis, and Eu
doxoides spiralis the most abundant overall. The presence of two warm-core
anticyclonic eddies, one cold-core cyclonic eddy, and upwelling on the Yuca
tan shelf and in the southern Bay of Campeche were expected to influence pa
tterns of siphonophore distribution. A relatively low siphonophore abundanc
e was anticipated to be found within the oligotrophic anticyclonic eddies,
whereas high density was expected within the local divergence created by th
e cyclonic eddy, and in the upwelling areas. Differences in overall density
and in species composition of siphonophores were recorded between the two
anticyclones, which probably reflect the ages of the two warm-core eddies.
Nighttime densities of siphonophores were similar throughout July 1988, but
daytime densities were higher within the cyclone and within the younger of
the two anticyclones than those recorded in the other areas or mesoscale f
eatures. Siphonophores were absent or scarce in the area of main upwelling
off northeastern Yucatan where cold waters reach the surface. Nevertheless,
cluster analysis using the Bray-Curtis Index yielded just three distinct a
ssemblages, which were correlated not with the mesoscale circulation regime
but rather with distance offshore.