58 research outputs found
Istrian coastal countercurrent in the year 1997
During the 1966-1997 period the Istrian Coastal Countercurrent (ICCC), i.e. the strong southward surface current confined to the coastal belt off Istria, up to 20 Nm wide, appeared and was particularly pronounced in August
of those years when mucilage or anoxia events occurred in the northern Adriatic (1977, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1997). In this paper we analyse geostrophic currents and
hydrographic characteristics of the northern Adriatic in 1997. We show that the ICCC can appear in months other than August, as well as that its occurrence implies the presence of an anticyclonic gyre in the northeastern Adriatic, in which lower salinity waters, originating in the Po Delta area, are confined. Longer residence times of this
nutrient-rich waters can favour eutrophication process and mucilaginous aggregate accumulation. On the basis of the prediction formula derived for the 1966-1992 period we were able to predict the intense episode of the ICCC in August 1997 from air-sea heat flux calculations with â7 months time lag and Po River discharge rate with â1 month time lag
Direct Discharges of Domestic Wastewater are a Major Source of Phosphorus and Nitrogen to the Mediterranean Sea
Direct discharges of treated and untreated wastewater are important sources of nutrients to coastal marine ecosystems and contribute to their eutrophication. Here, we estimate the spatially distributed annual inputs of phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) associated with direct domestic wastewater discharges from coastal cities to the Mediterranean Sea (MS). According to our best estimates, in 2003 these inputs amounted to 0.9 Ă 10âč mol P yr-1 and 15 Ă 10âč mol N yr-1, that is, values on the same order of magnitude as riverine inputs of P and N to the MS. By 2050, in the absence of any mitigation, population growth plus higher per capita protein intake and increased connectivity to the sewer system are projected to increase P inputs to the MS via direct wastewater discharges by 254, 163, and 32% for South, East, and North Mediterranean countries, respectively. Complete conversion to tertiary wastewater treatment would reduce the 2050 inputs to below their 2003 levels, but at an estimated additional cost of over âŹ2 billion yr-1. Management of coastal eutrophication may be best achieved by targeting tertiary treatment upgrades to the most affected near-shore areas, while simultaneously implementing legislation limiting P in detergents and increasing wastewater reuse across the entire basin
Climate Change and the Potential Spreading of Marine Mucilage and Microbial Pathogens in the Mediterranean Sea
Background: Marine snow (small amorphous aggregates with colloidal properties) is present in all oceans of the world.
Surface water warming and the consequent increase of water column stability can favour the coalescence of marine snow
into marine mucilage, large marine aggregates representing an ephemeral and extreme habitat. Marine mucilage
characterize aquatic systems with altered environmental conditions.
Methodology/Principal Findings: We investigated, by means of molecular techniques, viruses and prokaryotes within the
mucilage and in surrounding seawater to examine the potential of mucilage to host new microbial diversity and/or spread
marine diseases. We found that marine mucilage contained a large and unexpectedly exclusive microbial biodiversity and
hosted pathogenic species that were absent in surrounding seawater. We also investigated the relationship between
climate change and the frequency of mucilage in the Mediterranean Sea over the last 200 years and found that the number
of mucilage outbreaks increased almost exponentially in the last 20 years. The increasing frequency of mucilage outbreaks is
closely associated with the temperature anomalies.
Conclusions/Significance: We conclude that the spreading of mucilage in the Mediterranean Sea is linked to climate-driven
sea surface warming. The mucilage can act as a controlling factor of microbial diversity across wide oceanic regions and
could have the potential to act as a carrier of specific microorganisms, thereby increasing the spread of pathogenic bacteria
The Mediterranean Sea Regime Shift at the End of the 1980s, and Intriguing Parallelisms with Other European Basins
Background: Regime shifts are abrupt changes encompassing a multitude of physical properties and ecosystem variables,
which lead to new regime conditions. Recent investigations focus on the changes in ecosystem diversity and functioning
associated to such shifts. Of particular interest, because of the implication on climate drivers, are shifts that occur
synchronously in separated basins.
Principal Findings: In this work we analyze and review long-term records of Mediterranean ecological and hydro-climate variables and find that all point to a synchronous change in the late 1980s. A quantitative synthesis of the literature (including observed oceanic data, models and satellite analyses) shows that these years mark a major change in Mediterranean hydrographic properties, surface circulation, and deep water convection (the Eastern Mediterranean Transient). We provide novel analyses that link local, regional and basin scale hydrological properties with two major indicators of large scale climate, the North Atlantic Oscillation index and the Northern Hemisphere Temperature index, suggesting that the Mediterranean shift is part of a large scale change in the Northern Hemisphere. We provide a simplified scheme of the different effects of climate vs. temperature on pelagic ecosystems.
Conclusions: Our results show that the Mediterranean Sea underwent a major change at the end of the 1980s that
encompassed atmospheric, hydrological, and ecological systems, for which it can be considered a regime shift. We further provide evidence that the local hydrography is linked to the larger scale, northern hemisphere climate. These results suggest that the shifts that affected the North, Baltic, Black and Mediterranean (this work) Seas at the end of the 1980s, that have been so far only partly associated, are likely linked as part a northern hemisphere change. These findings bear wide implications for the development of climate change scenarios, as synchronous shifts may provide the key for distinguishing local (i.e., basin) anthropogenic drivers, such as eutrophication or fishing, from larger scale (hemispheric) climate drivers
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