Abstract
Because excess trophic resources (inorganic nutri- ents plus organic carbon) are detrimental to coral-reef and carbonate-platform development, biotic-pigment concentrations in sea-surface waters derived from Coastal Zone Color Scanner (CZCS) data can be useful in analyzing large-scale patterns of coral-reef development. The Nicaraguan Rise area of the western Caribbean provides a test case because reef development declines westward, from well developed reefs along the north coast of Jamaica to algal-sponge dominance of benthic com- munities on drowning platforms west of Pedro Bank. CZCS data revealed that Jamaica and the eastern end of the Nicaraguan Rise is predominantly influ- enced by low-chlorophyll ( less than 0.1 mg/m3) water from the Atlantic. Southern Caribbean water, usually carrying 0.125-0.15 mg Chl/m3 from runoff and up- welling off northern South America, flows over the more western banks. Local topographically-induced upwelling, as well as flow reversal and deep mix- ing associated with seasonal storms, further enrich surface waters over the rise. Although relative differences in water masses are obvious in CZCS scenes, conventional sea-based ocean- ography alone might have missed these trends because absolute differences are relatively small.
Original language | American English |
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State | Published - Jan 1 1988 |
Keywords
- ICRS6
- Remote sensing
- Ocean color
- Chlorophyll
- CZCS
Disciplines
- Life Sciences