Published Research

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2021: Geospatial distribution of hypoxia associated with a Karenia brevis bloom

Milbrandt, E.C., A.J. Martignette, M.A. Thompson, R.D. Bartleson, E.J. Phlips, S. Badylak, N.G. Nelson

Published In 2021

Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science

In 2018, the presence of bottom water hypoxia along the SW Florida coast was investigated during a bloom of the toxic dinoflagellate Karenia brevis. The bloom was first detected in November 2017. Monitoring of oxygen levels and bloom densities was carried out in 2018 and 2019 using sampling grids. Vertical profiles indicated a pycnocline at 3ā€“4 m where warmer, lower salinity water was at the surface, while the deeper hypoxic layer was colder with higher salinity. There were significantly higher abundances of K. brevis in the surface water compared to the hypoxic bottom water in September 2018. At two fixed sites, dissolved oxygen was measured continuously showing hypoxic conditions during that month. Geospatial analysis of vertical profile data yielded an estimate that the hypoxic layer covered an area of at least 655 km2. The possible influences of red tides on hypoxic conditions along the coast of the eastern Gulf of Mexico are discussed within the context of the 2018 K. brevis bloom event. Hypoxia occurring in parallel to a red tide bloom is more likely to occur with warmer ocean temperatures and increased fluxes of nutrients and fresh water to the Gulf of Mexico after hurricanes.

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