Marine intrusions in a coastal lagoon enhance the negative effect of solar UV radiation on phytoplankton photosynthetic rates  
Daniel CONDE, Luis AUBRIOT, Sylvia BONILLA, & Ruben SOMMARUGA
Marine Ecology Progress Series. (in press)
Fotografías: Zona Sur de la Laguna de Rocha. Barra abierta (julio de 1999) y barra cerrada (enero de 2000)
 

ABSRACT

We studied the changes in UV penetration associated with the dynamics of a shallow (mean depth = 0.6 m) coastal lagoon of South America that communicates periodically with the Atlantic Ocean. Two characteristic situations, i.e., the freshwater dominance and the salt-wedge intrusion were considered. Nine stations were sampled along the main axis of the lagoon, the main tributary, and the adjacent coast. The attenuation in the UV-B, UV-A and PAR wavebands were related to changes in the concentration of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), chlorophyll a (Chl a), absorption (ad) of the chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM), fluorescence of CDOM (Fd), organic (OSS) and inorganic suspended solids (ISS). The area more influenced by the marine intrusion showed the lowest DOC concentration (1.8 mg l-1) and the highest UV penetration. In this area, the depth corresponding to 10% of the irradiance below the surface (Z10%) corresponded to 66 and 100% of the water column for the UV-B and UV-A wavebands, respectively (diffuse attenuation coefficient, Kd = 7.3 and 2.1 m-1). The other zones of the lagoon (DOC = 5.7 to 9.3 mg l-1) presented low UV-B penetration (Kd = 29 to 64  m-1), although the Z10% for UV-A covered from 30 to 64% of the water column (Kd = 7 to 14  m-1). Under both hydrological situations, the Z10% for PAR reached the bottom in most part of the lagoon (Kd = 1 to 5 m-1). A significant reduction in DOC-specific absorption (ad*) during the marine intrusion indicated a change in the absorption characteristics of the CDOM. The variability in Kd for UV-B radiation was mainly explained by the concentration of dissolved and particulate organic substances, while the Kd values for UV-A and PAR were best predicted by the concentration of DOC and Chl a.