Climatic and Anthropogenic Impacts on Environmental Conditions and Phytoplankton Community in the Gulf of Trieste (Northern Adriatic Sea)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
During the last century, human activities have exerted an increasing pressure on coastal
ecosystems, primarily inducing their eutrophication, with a more recent partial mitigation of this
phenomenon where improvements of environmental management practices were adopted. However,
a reanalysis of the pressures on coastal zones and surrounding drainage basins is needed because
of the alterations induced nowadays by the climate changes. A comparative analysis of long-term
oceanographic and environmental data series (1986-2018) was performed, in order to highlight the
effects of anthropogenic and climatic disturbances on the phytoplankton community in the Gulf of
Trieste (GoT). After the 1980s, the decline in phytoplankton abundance was matched to increasing
periods of low runoff, an overall deficit of the precipitation and to a decrease in phosphate availability
in the coastal waters (-0.003 micro-mol L-1 yr-1), even in the presence of large riverine inputs of nitrogen
and silicates. This trend of oligotrophication was reversed in the 2010s by the beginning of a new and
unexpected phase of climatic instability, which also caused changes of the composition and seasonal
cycle of the phytoplankton community. Beyond the management of nutrient loads, it was shown
that climatic drivers such as seawater warming, precipitation and wind regime affect both nutrient
balance and phytoplankton community in this coastal zone.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
phytoplankton abundance; chlorophyll a; nutrient biogeochemistry; runoff; precipitation; coastal zones; climate changes; seasonal cycle; long-term trends
List of contributors:
Cozzi, Stefano
Published in: