Abstract

Whitings, the manifestation of high levels of suspended fine-grained calcium carbonate particles in the water, have been reported and studied worldwide. However, the triggering mechanism of whiting occurrences remains uncertain. The current study attempted to analyze potential factors that might account for whiting occurrences in a semi-enclosed gulf (namely the Arabian/Persian Gulf, hereinafter called the Gulf). First, spatial and temporal variability of whiting events and different potential driving factors (i.e., whiting seasonality, wind-induced mixing, sea surface temperature, and bathymetry) were explored and examined for five years (2015–2020). Second, as a general indicator of whiting occurrences in the Gulf, a whiting index (WI) was developed using time-series analysis and decision tree (DT) classification algorithm. Third, the correlation between the proposed WI and the spatial coverage of various whiting events was examined. Time-series analysis showed that whiting events during the winter season are associated with high winds that lasted for several days. Nevertheless, whiting events were rarely observed despite high wind speed and increased potential for CaCO3 precipitation in summer. This finding suggests that wind-driven forces might be potential sources for mixing water columns, resuspension of CaCO3 particles, and the appearance of whiting in the Gulf. The DT classification algorithm demonstrated that a minimum WI value of 1.1 can explain the initiation of most summer and winter whiting events. Furthermore, a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.73 was measured between WI and the extent of whiting along the UAE and Qatar coastlines in the Gulf. The proposed WI shows a simple yet effective method for identifying and estimating the extent of whiting in the Gulf.

Highlights

  • Whiting could be defined as clouds of fine-grained calcium carbonate (CaCO3 ) minerals that are suspended per water column in any water body [1]

  • The subsequent subsections present the results of analyzing potential causes of whiting events in the Gulf, including resuspension of sediments due to windgenerated turbulence, and a proposed whiting index

  • TheSST, current study investigated potentialaragonite triggeringsaturation mechanisms thatthat might account speed, seasonality, Sea Surface Salinity (SSS), and estimated index) lead to the for whiting occurrences in the Spatiotemporal analyses of potential factors that lead to the

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Summary

Introduction

Whiting could be defined as clouds of fine-grained calcium carbonate (CaCO3 ) minerals that are suspended per water column in any water body [1]. Whiting events occur in lakes and oceans. 2021, 13, 4795 have been reported in various fresh and marine bodies of water, including the Bahama. Whiting events have been studied for decades, and various assumptions have been presented to explain their triggering mechanisms. Whiting events in the Bahamas have been attributed to multiple causes: (a) resuspension of fine-grained bottom sediments due to bottom-feeding fish or turbulent tidal flow, (b) large-scale CaCO3 precipitation events, and (c) large-scale carbonate precipitation associated with planktonic algal blooms [24,25,26]. Boss and Neumann [31]

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