Project complete
Project Start
1999
Project Completion
2002
Award Amount
$303846
Study Site

Proper management of the Mobile Bay estuary and its living resources requires a fundamental understanding of current ecosystem structure and function. In addition, knowledge of how the ecosystem responds to natural and human-induced perturbations is necessary for predicting ecosystem health in the future. Among the most important aspects of how estuarine ecosystems function are the linkages between nutrient delivery, primary production and secondary production. More specifically, we do not fully understand how these linkages are modulated by variability in freshwater discharge in an adjacent estuary-estuarine plume/shelf ecosystem. The information collected during this study will provide insight as to how pulsed delivery of freshwater to estuaries acts to regulate production.

In the initial phase, efforts will be focused on characterization of the biological and biogeochemical patterns and pathways within the study area. Three major research questions guide this work: 1) What are the nutrient stocks, and what is the size of the biomass pool at each trophic level (e.g. microbial, phytoplankton, zooplankton, benthos and forage fishes), and how do they change in space with each season?; 2) At what rate is biomass (carbon) transferred between pools; and, 3) Do transfer rates and transfer pathways between biomass pools differ with varying levels of freshwater inflow, during wind driven resuspension events, and with season?