2002-03 Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary science report: An ecosystem report card after five years of marine zoning

Executive Summary:Circulation and Exchange of Florida Bay and South Florida Coastal Waters The coastal ecosystem of South Florida is comprised of distinct marine environments. Circulation of surface waters and exchange processes, which respond to both local and regional forcings, interconnect different coastal environments. In addition, re-circulating current systemswithin the South Florida coastal ecosystem such as the Tortugas Gyre contribute to retention of locally spawned larvae.Variability in salinity, chlorophyll, and light transmittance occurs on a wide range of temporal and spatial scales, in response to both natural forcing, such as seasonal precipitation and evaporation and interannual “El Niño” climate signals, and anthropogenic forcing, such as water management practices in south Florida. The full time series of surface property maps are posted at www.aoml.noaa.gov/sfp.Regional surface circulation patterns, shown by satellite-tracked surface drifters, respond to large-scale forcing such as wind variability and sea level slopes. Recent patterns include slow flow from near the mouth of the Shark River to the Lower Keys, rapid flow from the Tortugas tothe shelf of the Carolinas, and flow from the Tortugas around the Tortugas Gyre and out of the Florida Straits.The Southwest Florida Shelf and the Atlantic side of the Florida Keys coastal zone are directly connected by passages between the islands of the Middle and Lower Keys. Movement of water between these regions depends on a combination of local wind-forced currents and gravitydriventransports through the passages, produced by cross-Key sea level differences on time scales of several days to weeks, which arise because of differences in physical characteristics (shape, orientation, and depth) of the shelf on either side of the Keys. A southeastward meanflow transports water from western Florida Bay, which undergoes large variations in water quality, to the reef tract.Adequate sampling of oceanographic events requires both the capability of near real-time recognition of these events, and the flexibility to rapidly stage targeted field sampling. Capacity to respond to events is increasing, as demonstrated by investigations of the 2002 “blackwater”event and a 2003 entrainment of Mississippi River water to the Tortugas. (PDF contains 364 pages.)

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Keller, B. D.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: NOAA/National Ocean Service/National Marine Sanctuary Program 2007
Subjects:Ecology, Management, Environment,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20090
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