info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Moderate effect of damming the Romaine River (Quebec, Canada) on coastal plankton dynamics
Fecha
2018-04Registro en:
Senneville, Simon; Schloss, Irene Ruth; St-Onge Drouin, Simon; Bélanger, Simon; Winkler, Gesche; et al.; Moderate effect of damming the Romaine River (Quebec, Canada) on coastal plankton dynamics; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science; 203; 4-2018; 29-43
0272-7714
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Senneville, Simon
Schloss, Irene Ruth
St-Onge Drouin, Simon
Bélanger, Simon
Winkler, Gesche
Dumont, Dany
Johnston, Patricia
St-Onge, Isabelle
Resumen
Rivers’ damming disrupts the seasonal cycle of freshwater and nutrient inputs into the marine system, which can lead to changes in coastal plankton dynamics. Here we use a 3-D 5-km resolution coupled biophysical model and downscale it to a 400-m resolution to simulate the effect of damming the Romaine River in Québec, Canada, which discharges on average 327 m3 s−1 of freshwater into the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence. Model results are compared with environmental data obtained from 2 buoys and in situ sampling near the Romaine River mouth during the 2013 spring–summer period. Noteworthy improvements are made to the light attenuation parametrization and the trophic links of the biogeochemical model. The modelled variables reproduced most of the observed levels of variability. Comparisons between natural and regulated discharge simulation show differences in primary production and in the dominance of plankton groups in the Romaine River plume. The maximum increase in primary production when averaged over the inner part of Mingan Archipelago is 41%, but 7.1% when the primary production anomaly is averaged from March to September.