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The Decline and Recovery of a Persistent Texas Brown Tide Algal Bloom in the Laguna Madre (Texas, USA)

The Laguna Madre has experienced a persistent bloom of Aureoumbra lagunensis for over eight years. The persistence of this bloom may be due in part to the often hypersaline conditions in Laguna Madre (40-60 psu) that favor the growth of A. lagunensis. Above-normal rainfall in the fall of 1997 reduce...

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Published in:Estuaries 2001-06, Vol.24 (3), p.337-346
Main Authors: Buskey, Edward J., Liu, Hongbin, Collumb, Christopher, Jose Guilherme F. Bersano
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Liu, Hongbin
Collumb, Christopher
Jose Guilherme F. Bersano
description The Laguna Madre has experienced a persistent bloom of Aureoumbra lagunensis for over eight years. The persistence of this bloom may be due in part to the often hypersaline conditions in Laguna Madre (40-60 psu) that favor the growth of A. lagunensis. Above-normal rainfall in the fall of 1997 reduced the salinities in Baffin Bay from > 40 to < 20 psu. A. lagunensis cell densities dropped from $>10^{6}\ \text{cells}\ {\rm ml}^{-1}$ in July 1997 to c. 200 cells ml-1 in January 1998. During this time of low brown tide density, phytoplankton biomass generally remained high and the Laguna Madre experienced successive blooms of diatoms (Rhizosolenia spp.) and cyanobacteria. Hypersaline conditions returned in 1998 and brown tide densities increased to $>0.5\times 10^{6}\ \text{cells}\ {\rm ml}^{-1}$ by summer. The extraordinary persistence of the brown tide and the unusual sequence of intense blooms may be related in part to the reduction of zooplankton populations. Microzooplankton populations declined following the above-normal rain in the fall of 1997; populations did not recover until fall 1998. Copepod populations also declined sharply and remained low in Laguna Madre, but recovered by summer 1998 in Baffin Bay. Dilution experiments indicated that microzooplankton grazing and phytoplankton growth were usually balanced when measured during our cruises. The rapid recovery of the A. lagunensis bloom suggests that this alga may be a more resilient component of the Laguna Madre flora than previously suspected.
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The rapid recovery of the A. lagunensis bloom suggests that this alga may be a more resilient component of the Laguna Madre flora than previously suspected.</abstract><cop>Lawrence, KS</cop><pub>Estuarine Research Federation</pub><doi>10.2307/1353236</doi><tpages>10</tpages></addata></record>
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identifier ISSN: 0160-8347
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Springer Link
subjects Algae
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Aquatic crustaceans
Aureoumbra lagunensis
Bays
Biological and medical sciences
Biomass
Brown tides
Cells
Cruises
Cyanobacteria
Depopulation
Diatoms
Dilution
Ecotoxicology, biological effects of pollution
Estuaries
Flora
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Marine and brackish environment
Marine microorganisms
Ocean tides
Persistence
Phytoplankton
Plankton
Plankton blooms
Population growth
Populations
Rainfall
Recovery
Rhizosolenia
Salinity
Summer
USA, Texas
USA, Texas, Laguna Madre
Zooplankton
title The Decline and Recovery of a Persistent Texas Brown Tide Algal Bloom in the Laguna Madre (Texas, USA)
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