The northern Adriatic has been recognized for many years as a region of high marine production at several trophic levels from phytoplankton to fish. The rivers draining into the northern Adriatic are the major sources of external nutrient input, especially during stratified periods. The water mass exchange between the northern region and the remainder of the essentially oligotrophic Adriatic has a great influence on the productivity and standing crops of different sub-areas. A terrigenous supply of nutrients all along the western coast via run-off influences the productivity of a relatively narrow coastal belt, and consequently the biomasses and production rates are spatially very variable. In shallow turbulent environments, like the northern Adriatic, where increased nutrient availability is episodic, the microbial or the grazing food web can alternately dominate in the carbon flow over short time periods. In spring, as a result of episodic nutrient enrichment of the euphotic zone and insufficient grazing, as a controlling factor of their population size, large-sized phytoplankton blooms occur that consequently determine a major export to the bottom via sedimentation. On the opposite, microbial food web is typical of low energy environment, mostly based on regeneration processes. As a consequence, the final fate of photosynthesised carbon can strongly change over time in the same environment as a function of the planktonic food web structures. In the framework of VECTOR project ("VulnErabilità delle Coste e degli ecosistemi marini italiani ai cambiamenti climaTici e loro ruolO nei cicli del caRbonio mediterraneo") a re-analisys of the entire available data set of parameters relevant in driving C fluxes and export rates has been planned to provide conceptual models and appropriate parametrizations to modelers, with the aim to hindcast and forecast ecosystem scenarios at the basin scale.

Carbon cycle variability in the northern Adriatic ecosystem: a re-analysis of historical data

Ravaioli M;Cozzi S;Socal G;Spagnoli F;
2007

Abstract

The northern Adriatic has been recognized for many years as a region of high marine production at several trophic levels from phytoplankton to fish. The rivers draining into the northern Adriatic are the major sources of external nutrient input, especially during stratified periods. The water mass exchange between the northern region and the remainder of the essentially oligotrophic Adriatic has a great influence on the productivity and standing crops of different sub-areas. A terrigenous supply of nutrients all along the western coast via run-off influences the productivity of a relatively narrow coastal belt, and consequently the biomasses and production rates are spatially very variable. In shallow turbulent environments, like the northern Adriatic, where increased nutrient availability is episodic, the microbial or the grazing food web can alternately dominate in the carbon flow over short time periods. In spring, as a result of episodic nutrient enrichment of the euphotic zone and insufficient grazing, as a controlling factor of their population size, large-sized phytoplankton blooms occur that consequently determine a major export to the bottom via sedimentation. On the opposite, microbial food web is typical of low energy environment, mostly based on regeneration processes. As a consequence, the final fate of photosynthesised carbon can strongly change over time in the same environment as a function of the planktonic food web structures. In the framework of VECTOR project ("VulnErabilità delle Coste e degli ecosistemi marini italiani ai cambiamenti climaTici e loro ruolO nei cicli del caRbonio mediterraneo") a re-analisys of the entire available data set of parameters relevant in driving C fluxes and export rates has been planned to provide conceptual models and appropriate parametrizations to modelers, with the aim to hindcast and forecast ecosystem scenarios at the basin scale.
2007
Istituto di Scienze Marine - ISMAR
primary production;
carbon cycle;
northern Adriatic Sea
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/438003
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact