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Journal of Coastal Research | 2008

Influence of the Amazon and Para Rivers on Water Composition and Phytoplankton Biomass on the Adjacent Shelf

Maria de Lourdes Souza Santos; Carmen Medeiros; Kátia Muniz; Fernando Antônio do Nascimento Feitosa; Ralf Schwamborn; Sílvio José de Macêdo

Abstract In the context of the REVIZEE programme, an extensive sampling cruise was carried out in the northern section of the Brazilian Exclusive Economic Zone on board O.V. Antares (Operation North III). Several parameters were surveyed along the Amazon continental shelf during this cruise, such as horizontal and vertical distributions of temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, pH, dissolved inorganic nutrients, and phytoplankton biomass. Water with salinity below 33 psu and high silicate content was observed throughout the shelf, indicating the influence of the Amazon River plume up to a distance of 147 km from the coast; pH always remained alkaline. Water temperature was relatively homogeneous at the surface, with an average of 28°C. A permanent thermocline was detected in oceanic regions. Coastal waters were eutrophic, well oxygenated (maximum of 6.54 mL O2 L−1), and presented high chlorophyll a (maximum of 9.8 mg chlorophyll a m−3) and nutrient concentrations (up to 9.54 μmol L−1 NO3−, 0.89 μmol L−1 PO42−, and 108.59 μmol L−1 Si044−). Oceanic waters adjacent to the Amazon shelf presented high transparency (Secchi depth up to 35 m) and chlorophyll a (mean: 0.1 mg m−3) and low nutrient concentrations (maximum of 1.58 μmol L−1 NO3−, 0.18 μmol L−1 PO42−, and 5.92 μmol L−1 Si044−). Cluster analysis performed with all data showed a clear separation between coastal and oceanic waters at the surface layer and at 1% light penetration layers. This separation into two groups of stations clearly represents areas with different degrees of influence from the discharges of the Amazon Basin. The Amazon River is very important to the nutrient budgets of the shelf.


Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2003

Diel and seasonal changes in the macrozooplankton community of a tropical estuary in Northeastern Brazil

Tâmara de Almeida e Silva; Sigrid Neumann-Leitão; Ralf Schwamborn; Lúcia Maria de Oliveira Gusmão; Dilma Aguiar do Nascimento-Vieira

Studies were carried out to assess the macrozooplankton small-scale temporal and spatial variability at three stations in three hours intervals, during 24 hours in July 1996 (rainy season) and December 1996 (dry season). A plankton net 300µm mesh size was hauled at surface during three minutes. Water samples for salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen and pH were taken simultaneously with the zooplankton samples. Sixty-five macrozooplankton taxa were registered. Copepoda constituted the most common taxon and comprised 58% of the total zooplankton counts. Brachyuran zoeae, cirripedian larvae, Larvacea (Oikopleura dioica Fol, 1872), and Gastropoda veligers were abundant at some tidal cycles, mainly during the night. Species diversity average was 2.0 bits.ind-1. The mean density ranged from 23 ind.m-3 to 5,201 ind.m-3. The rainy season presented greater numerical abundance. A regular temporal zooplankton cycle was not observed. Instead, there was a large stochastic variation between samples.


Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2004

Mesozooplankton of an impacted bay in North Eastern Brazil

Andréa Pinto Silva; Sigrid Neumann-Leitão; Ralf Schwamborn; Lúcia Maria de Oliveira Gusmão; Tâmara de Almeida e Silva

Mesozooplankton abundance and distribution at Suape Bay, Pernambuco, was studied to assess the impacts caused by the construction of an internal port to increase the capacity of the Suape Port Complex. Zooplankton sampling was done at 3 stations during the dry (November-December/1997) and rainy (April-May/1998) seasons. A plankton net with 300 µm mesh size was used. Wet weight plankton biomass ranged from 44 mg.m-3 to 3,638 mg.m-3. Forty-five macrozooplankton taxa were registered. The most abundant was Copepoda. Among copepods, Acartia lilljeborgi, Parvocalanus crassirostris, Oithona hebes, Corycaeus (C.) speciosus and Temora turbinata were most frequent. Minimum abundance was 9 ind.m-3 and maximum was 2,532 ind.m-3. Average species diversity was 2.55 bits.ind-1. As a whole, Suape Bay has been under severe environmental stress and it seemed reasonable to assume that the recent modifications of the basin have resulted in changes in species composition and trophic structure, with an increase in marine influence.


Anais Da Academia Brasileira De Ciencias | 2012

Population ecology of the blue crab Callinectes danae (Crustacea: Portunidae) in a Brazilian tropical estuary

Marina de Sá Leitão Câmara de Araújo; Aline do Vale Barreto; Aurinete O. Negromonte; Ralf Schwamborn

This paper aims at describing the population ecology of the swimming crab Callinectes danae Smith, 1869 in one of the most productive estuaries of Brazil, the Santa Cruz Channel. These crabs were monthly collected from January to December/2009 at four stations along the channel, two in the upper and two in the lower estuary. A total of 2373 specimens of C. danae were collected during the study. Males had a larger average carapace width than non-ovigerous females (60.0 ± 15.6 mm and 52.9 ± 12.4 mm, respectively), an adaptation that gives greater protection for females during the copulation. Overall sex ratio did not differ significantly from 1:1. However, evaluating sex-ratio by sampling area, males and juveniles of both sexes occurred preferentially in the upper estuary (p < 0.05), while adult females, including ovigerous, inhabited the lower estuary, an area of major marine influence (p < 0.05). While juveniles look for estuarine waters due to the benefit from the shelter and abundance of food, ovigerous females migrate to areas of greater depth and higher salinity in order to provide a more favorable environment for embryonic and larval development and to enhance larval dispersal. Recruitment of juveniles was continuous along the year, but intensified from March to June and, with less intensity, from October to December.


Marine Biology Research | 2010

Demersal zooplankton communities from tropical habitats in the southwestern Atlantic

Pedro Augusto Mendes de Castro Melo; Tâmara A. Silva; Sigrid Neumann-Leitão; Ralf Schwamborn; Lúcia Maria de Oliveira Gusmão; Fernando de Figueiredo Porto Neto

Abstract Demersal zooplankton were captured with traps from a set of tropical coastal habitats (seagrass bed, coral reef, gravel, and sand bottoms) to allow comparisons among communities. Sampling was carried out during dry and rainy seasons in 2000 and 2001. Traps with and without light were placed at 18:00 and removed at 06:00 the next day for three consecutive days. Eighty-eight zooplankton taxa were identified. Copepoda was the most abundant group, outranking in relative abundance in seagrass and in sandy bottoms. Copepoda was mainly represented by Oithona oculata, Pseudodiaptomus acutus, and Acartia lilljeborgi. No significant differences were found among substrates (P=0.1464); however, differences were significant between light and dark traps communities (P=0.0410). The average density was 7113 (±3966) ind m−2 in the light and 4759 (±4825) ind m−2 in the dark. In the light traps, Amphipoda and O. oculata were more representative. Without light, the main group was Foraminifera (>40%). Cluster analysis presented two main groups, Itamaracá Island and Tamandaré Bay; light and dark traps formed separate groups within these location groups. The results allow us to assess the efficiency of the used traps in a set of habitats of the tropical coastal area and gives information on the preference of specific organism groups in one of the tested substrates.


Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2007

Fluxes of zooplankton biomass between a tidal estuary and the sea in Northeastern Brazil

Mauro de Melo Júnior; Maryse Nogueira Paranaguá; Ralf Schwamborn; Sigrid Neumann Leitão; Werner Ekau

B S T R A C T The objective of this study was to quantify the zooplankton biomass transport between the Santa Cruz Channel (SCC) at Catuama north inlet and the adjacent shelf located in Itamaraca estuarine ecosystem, Pernambuco State, Northeastern Brazil. Sampling was carried out in August 2001 at spring and neap tides at three stations every 3-hour interval. Collections were made in three depths with a plankton pump coupled to a 300 µm mesh size net. Current data were obtained with an ADCP (Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler). In laboratory, samples were filtered for wet weigh determination. High biomass variation was recorded, with highest values at nocturnal flood and ebb during spring tide. The average instantaneous biomass transport was 139.48 ± 72.58 mg.m


Helgoland Marine Research | 1996

Detritus derived from eelgrass and macroalgae as potential carbon source forMytilus edulis in Kiel Fjord, Germany: a preliminary carbon isotopic study

W. L. Wiedemeyer; Ralf Schwamborn

Stable carbon isotope ratios were measured for the muscle tissue of blue musselMytilus edulis, eelgrassZostera marina, macroalgaeFucus vesiculosus, and phytoplankton in two areas in Kiel Fjord, Germany. Carbon isotope evidence is presented to show the predominance of phytoplanktonic production as a carbon source forM. edulis tissue carbon. Via decomposition processes for both eelgrass and macroalgal primary production, each contributed 0.5–6.5% to mussel carbon.


Anais Da Academia Brasileira De Ciencias | 2012

Abundance and instantaneous transport of Petrolisthes armatus (Gibbes, 1850) planktonic larvae in the Catuama inlet, Northeast Brazil

Mauro de Melo Júnior; Ralf Schwamborn; Sigrid Neumann-Leitão; Maryse Nogueira Paranaguá

The influence of tidal and diel changes on the exchange of Petrolisthes armatus planktonic larvae was studied at the Catuama inlet, which represents an intermediate system of marine and estuarine environments in the Northeast Brazil. To characterize the larval abundance and vertical distribution, samplings were carried out in August 2001 at neap tide and 3 stations, with 3 hours interval over 24 hours. Samples were taken at three or two depths at each station, with a plankton pump coupled to a 300 µm mesh size net. Petrolisthes armatus zoea I and II showed a mean of 26.3 ± 83.6 and 12 ± 38.8 ind m-3, respectively. During flood tides, the larvae were more concentrated in the midwater and surface, which avoided the transport to internal regions. In contrast, during ebb tides when the larvae were distributed in the three layers, the higher concentrations were found in the bottom, which avoided a major exportation. The diel dynamic of the larval fluxes was characterized by vertical migration behavior associated to the tidal regime, which suggested that the development of this decapod apparently occurs in the inner shelf (instead of the outer shelf) off this peculiar ecosystem.


WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment | 2009

The plankton from Maracajaú reef ecosystem (Brazil) - offshore coral reefs under multiple human stressors

Sigrid Neumann-Leitão; F. A. N. Feitosa; E. Mayal; Ralf Schwamborn; M. G. G. Silva-Cunha; Tâmara de Almeida e Silva; N. F. Melo; F. F. Porto Neto

To evaluate the Maracajau reef ecosystem (Northeastern Brazil), observations, sampling and measurements were performed monthly during spring low tides from February to June 2000, covering the transition from dry to rainy season. In this area, there is an extensive (approximately 10 km x 4 km), but to date poorly investigated, offshore coral reef formation, where a Marine Protected Area was established recently. The reef area presented chlorophyll a concentrations varying from 1.1 mg m to 9.3 mg m, with higher values registered during the rainy season. Average zooplankton biomass values were 117.0 mg m (microzooplankton) and 15.7 mg m (mesozooplankton). A total of 136 phytoplankton taxa were identified. Diatoms were the most abundant and diverse group, with 102 species. Average phytoplankton density was 3,125 10 cells 1. It was identified that there were 61 zooplankton taxa, with copepods showing the highest diversity (23 species) and abundance. Seasonal forcing determined the microand mesozooplankton community structure, rather than the coastal-offshore gradient. In spite of the distance from the coast (5 to 7 km offshore), this area is intensively used by local populations, mainly for artisan fishery and diving tourism. The area is exposed to seasonally varying negative impacts due to freshwater runoff, mangrove degradation and tourism, being also menaced by coastal eutrophication.


Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research | 2008

Dynamic patterns of zooplankton transport and migration in Catuama Inlet (Pernambuco, Brazil), with emphasis on the decapod crustacean larvae

Ralf Schwamborn; Mauro de Melo Júnior; Sigrid Neumann Leitão; Werner Ekau; Maryse Nogueira Paranaguá

Esta investigacion tiene como objetivo cuantificar y modelar el transporte de zooplancton, con enfasis en las larvas de Crustacea Decapoda. El muestreo se realizo a tres profundidades con una bomba de plancton acoplada a una red con malla de 300 /?m. Se obtuvieron los datos de corrientes con un ADCP. Los datos mostraron la existencia de campos de corrientes y de transporte vertical y horizontal heterogeneos. Se identificaron 27 grupos de Decapoda (larvas de Sergestidae, Porcellanidae, Upogebiidae, Caridea, Brachyura). La mayoria de las especies y fases larvales mostraron patrones de migracion vertical caracteristicos, en fase con los ciclos de la marea diurnos, favoreciendo la retencion o exportacion del estuario.

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Sigrid Neumann-Leitão

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Tâmara de Almeida e Silva

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Gleice de Souza Santos

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Mauro de Melo Júnior

Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco

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Maryse Nogueira Paranaguá

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Sigrid Neumann Leitão

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Andréa Pinto Silva

Federal University of Pernambuco

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