Abstract
In the Gulf of Nicoya on the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica, nutrient rich equatorial subsurface water (ESW) is upwelled in much of the lower gulf. These offshore waters are often regarded as the major source of nutrients to the gulf. However, for most of the year, the ESW has little influence on the nutrient content of the upper gulf, which has a distinct character from the lower gulf. The upper gulf, extending 40 km north of the restriction between Puntarenas Peninsula and San Lucas Island, is bordered primarily by mangrove swamps, is less than 20 m deep, and is less saline than the lower gulf. We surveyed the upper gulf for dissolved inorganic nitrogen, phosphate, silicate, dissolved oxygen, and chlorophyll in November 2000, January and July 2001. All nutrients are more concentrated in the upper gulf during the rainy and transitional seasons than the dry season, significantly so for phosphate and silicate. Throughout the year, nutrients tend to be much more concentrated in the less saline water of the upper gulf. This trend indicates that discharge from the Tempisque River predominantly controls spatial and temporal nutrient variability in the upper gulf. However, nutrient rich ESW, upwelled offshore and mixed to form a mid-temperature intermediate water, may enter the inner gulf to provide an important secondary source of nutrients during the dry season.
Highlights
Strong seasonality in precipitation dominates the climatic variability in the tropics
The Gulf of Nicoya in Costa Rica, Central America is exceptional for a tropical estuary in that it has been the subject of over 100 studies, at least three of which focus on water column nutrient concentrations (Vargas 1995)
In this paper we present the results of a fourth study of the distribution of nitrate, nitrite, inorganic phosphate, silicate and dissolved oxygen in the Gulf of Nicoya in 2000-2001, in order to investigate the dominant sources of nutrients in the upper gulf and their impact on primary productivity and oxygen concentrations
Summary
Strong seasonality in precipitation dominates the climatic variability in the tropics. The Gulf of Nicoya in Costa Rica, Central America is exceptional for a tropical estuary in that it has been the subject of over 100 studies, at least three of which focus on water column nutrient concentrations (Vargas 1995). Epifanio et al (1983) conducted the first survey of water column nutrients and oxygen in the Gulf in 1979-1980, when the population of Costa Rica was roughly half of what it was at the time of this study. Chaves and Birkicht (1996) concluded that the major source of nitrogen and phosphorus to the gulf is the Equatorial Subsurface Water (ESW), which is mixed throughout the water column by winds and turbulence and imported into the gulf by wind-driven advection In their analysis, they observed no significant difference between the rainy and dry season concentrations, when averaged over the upper and lower gulf. The objective of this study was to understand the spatial and temporal variability of nutrient concentrations in the under-sampled upper gulf, in order to assess the dominant nutrient sources, their seasonal variability, and their impact on chlorophyll a and dissolved oxygen concentrations
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