CADIC   02618
CENTRO AUSTRAL DE INVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Particle Dynamics in Ushuaia Bay (Tierra del Fuego)-Potential Effect on Dissolved Oxygen Depletion
Autor/es:
FLORES MELO, X.; BOURRIN, F.; DURRIEU DE MADRON, X.; KERDEL, L.; MENNITI C.; MARTÍN, J.; COLLOCA, C.
Revista:
Water
Editorial:
MDPI
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 12
ISSN:
2073-4441
Resumen:
This study examines the distribution and seasonal evolution ofhydrographic, hydrodynamic, and nepheloid layers in Ushuaia Bay and thesubmerged glacial valley that connects it to the Beagle Channel. The hydrographic structure is highly seasonal, with a total mixing of the water column in winter and the appearance of a pycnocline between 50 and 70 m deep from spring to late autumn, mainly due to desalination. A counter‐clockwise current sweeps the entire bay regardless of the season or phase of the tide. This current is at its maximum in the surface layer, allowing the rapid renewal of the bay?s waters, while deep currents are weak and imply a slow renewal of the valley?s waters.Turbid and oxygen‐depleted structures are observed in summer in the valley. Thecombination of seasonal stratification, high organic matter inputs from planktonic production, oxygen consumption for remineralization, and sluggish circulation results in a decrease in near‐bottom oxygen concentration in the glacial valley at the end of the stratified season, before mixing and re‐oxygenation of the water column during the southern winter. The possible impact of dissolved oxygen depletion in the bottom waters of the valley on benthic organisms, like crustaceans, is discussed.