Abstract

The resident and tourist population in the Mexican Caribbean has grown exponentially, increasing the availability of dissolved inorganic nutrients in coastal waters through submarine groundwater discharge (SGD). Recently, a new massive drift of Sargassum spp. has occurred that can provide new organic matter and enrich coastal water with nutrients. In different sites in the Mexican Caribbean, the chemical composition of the water was analyzed, and the δ15N of Thalassia testudinum was determined between 2016 and 2019. Evidence of SGD was observed in Akumal Bay due to high silicate concentrations and its negative correlation with salinity. Seasonal and interannual variation in NH4+ concentration was observed at these sites. In October 2018, SGD contributed ∼70 times more nitrogen and ∼194 times more phosphorus than the decomposition of the pelagic macroalgae Sargassum spp. The δ15N data showed that Akumal Bay received nitrogen of anthropogenic origin and that nitrogen fixation processes or probably assimilation of nitrogen of the leachates of pelagic Sargassum spp were dominant at Mahahual and Xahuayxol.

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