Authors
Kevin D Friedland, Robert T Leaf, Joe Kane, Desiree Tommasi, Rebecca G Asch, Nathan Rebuck, Rubao Ji, Scott I Large, Charles Stock, Vincent S Saba
Publication date
2015/7/1
Journal
Continental Shelf Research
Volume
102
Pages
47-61
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
The spring phytoplankton bloom on the US Northeast Continental Shelf is a feature of the ecosystem production cycle that varies annually in timing, spatial extent, and magnitude. To quantify this variability, we analyzed remotely-sensed ocean color data at two spatial scales, one based on ecologically defined sub-units of the ecosystem (production units) and the other on a regular grid (0.5°). Five units were defined: Gulf of Maine East and West, Georges Bank, and Middle Atlantic Bight North and South. The units averaged 47×103 km2 in size. The initiation and termination of the spring bloom were determined using change-point analysis with constraints on what was identified as a bloom based on climatological bloom patterns. A discrete spring bloom was detected in most years over much of the western Gulf of Maine production unit. However, bloom frequency declined in the eastern Gulf of Maine and transitioned …
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Scholar articles
KD Friedland, RT Leaf, J Kane, D Tommasi, RG Asch… - Continental Shelf Research, 2015