Importance Of Remote Sensing For The Study Of Spatial Dynamics Of Estuarine Neuston From Southern Chile

2020 IEEE LATIN AMERICAN GRSS & ISPRS REMOTE SENSING CONFERENCE (LAGIRS)(2020)

Cited 0|Views2
No score
Abstract
Zooplankton aggregation, hydrographic and remote sensing data were employed to relate the spatial dynamics of neustonic communities with chlorophyll a (Chi a) and suspended organic matter ( SOM) at a spatial mesoscale (10 to 1000 kin) in the southern Chilean fjords system along Magellan Strait, Chile (CIMAR 16: October/November 2010 and CIMAR 25; September/October 2019) in order to identify oceanographic process producing aggregation of neuston. Preliminary evidence of CIMAR 25 shows significant concentrations of Chl a and SOM around Dawson Island (DI), Magellan Strait. During CIMAR 16 important aggregation of specific neustonic taxa (copepodites of Microsetella rosea, larvae of the polychaete Polygordius sp and cyphonautes of the bryozoan Membranipora isabelleana) was observed around Dl, Magellan Strait. Satelital images in the area of CIMAR 16 provide evidence of important aggregation of chlorophyll a/SOM around Dl. CIMAR Cimar 25 showed that the Chl a and SOM aggregation around Di is recurrent and could to explain the high concentration of neuston around this island to spite of mesotrophic conditions. Remote sensing in this study area provides a tool to understanding oceanographic and topographic factors that potentially regulate the abundance and spatial distribution of surface zooplankton to spatial meso-scale along Magellan Strait.
More
Translated text
Key words
LAGIRS Neuston, Magellan Strait, Wake-island effect, Meso-scale studies, Chlorophyll a, Microsetella
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined