Abstract

ABSTRACT The Río de la Plata estuary, located in southeast South America, is of great social and environmental relevance for the region. In the summer of 2018–2019, an exceptional cyanobacterial bloom was detected along the northern coast of the estuary, which greatly affected tourism and recreation, as reported in previous studies and the public press. This is the first work that uses satellite images to quantitatively monitor the evolution of this bloom in an intermediate zone of the estuary, including its initial and ending stages. Chlorophyll-a threshold maps of 10 and 24 µg/L were detected from Sentinel-2 imagery between November 2018-May 2019, while the presence of cyanobacteria was confirmed from phytoplankton field samples and a continuous (point) record of phycocyanin fluorescence. The combination of both satellite and in-situ information was crucial to analyze the spatiotemporal variability of the bloom, and to study its qualitative relationship to environmental drivers: local winds, discharge of the Río de la Plata main tributaries, discharge of a local tributary, water temperature and salinity. Our study shows the complexity of short-term bloom dynamics in a coastal region of the Río de la Plata, particularly highlighting the role of local winds on surface transport and mixing conditions.

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