Abstract

The cross-shelf advection of coastal waters into the deep Gulf of Mexico is important for the transport of nutrients or potential pollutants. Twenty years of ocean color satellite imagery document such cross-shelf transport events via three export pathways in the Gulf of Mexico: from the Campeche Bank toward the central Gulf, from the Campeche Bank toward the Florida Straits, and from the Mississippi Delta to the Florida Straits. A catalog of these events was created based on the visual examination of 7280 daily satellite images. Water transport from the Campeche Bank to the central Gulf occurred frequently and with no seasonal pattern. Transport from Campeche Bank to the Florida Straits occurred episodically, when the Loop Current was retracted. Four such episodes were identified, between about December and June, in 2002, 2009, 2016, and 2017, each lasting ~3 months. Movement of Mississippi River water to the Florida Straits was more frequent and showed near seasonal occurrence, when the Loop Current was extended, while the Mississippi River discharge seems to play only a secondary role. Eight such episodes were identified—in 1999, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2011, 2014, and 2015—each lasting ~3 months during summer. The 2015 episode lasted 5 months.

Highlights

  • The advective transport of water between different regions is an important mechanism for plankton and larval transport, with relevance to marine biodiversity, coral reef ecosystems, and coastal fisheries

  • Twenty years of satellite observations were used to quantify the occurrence of offshore transport events and pathways for dispersal of turbid coastal waters into the interior of the eastern half of the Gulf of Mexico

  • A catalog of river and coastal transport events to offshore waters in the Gulf of Mexico was developed based on ocean color satellite images

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Summary

Introduction

The advective transport of water between different regions is an important mechanism for plankton and larval transport, with relevance to marine biodiversity, coral reef ecosystems, and coastal fisheries This type of connectivity is of great interest to define ecosystem-based management strategies in the Gulf of Mexico [1,2]. The northeastern perimeter of the Campeche Bank represents the main source of red grouper and lionfish recruits to the northeastern Gulf of Mexico [3]. It is relevant for the transport of pollutants, as observed during the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill e.g., [4,5].

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