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The influence of mixing on primary productivity: A unique application of classical critical depth theory

journal contribution
posted on 2023-12-15, 00:06 authored by Peter van Ruth, George G Ganf, Timothy WardTimothy Ward
Mixing and primary productivity was examined in upwelling influenced nearshore waters off south western Eyre Peninsula (SWEP) in the eastern Great Australian Bight (EGAB), the economically and ecologically important shelf region off southern Australia that forms part of the Southern and Indian oceans. Mixing/stratification in the region was highly temporally variable with a unique upwelling circulation in summer/autumn (November-April), and downwelling through winter/spring (May-September). Highest productivity was associated with upwelled/stratified water (up to 2958mgCm-2d-1), with low productivity during periods of downwelling and mixing (∼300-550mgCm-2d-1), yet no major variations in macro-nutrient concentrations were detected between upwelling and downwelling events (silica>1μmolL-1, nitrate/nitrite>0.4μmolL-1, phosphate>0.1μmolL-1). We hypothesise that upwelling enriches the region with micro-nutrients. High productivity off SWEP appears to be driven by a shallowing of mixed layer depth due to the injection of upwelled waters above Zcr. Low productivity follows the suppression of enrichment during downwelling/mixing events, and is exacerbated in winter/spring by low irradiances and short daylengths. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.

History

Publication title

PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY

Volume

85

Issue

3-4

Pagination

224-235:12

ISSN

0079-6611

Department/School

Integrated Marine Observing System, Sustainable Marine Research Collaboration

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD

Publication status

  • Published

Rights statement

Copyright 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.