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Sebastián Contreras-Fernández,Lennin Florez-Leiva,María Camila Bernal-Sánchez,Wilberto Pacheco-Paternina,Shalenys Bedoya-Valestt,Lorenzo Portillo-Cogollo 한국해양과학기술원 2022 Ocean science journal Vol.57 No.4
Estuaries are highly diverse ecosystems that occur at the interface between land and sea and thus possess a high degree of environmental variation over short spatial and temporal scales. The Gulf of Urabá (1800 km 2; mean depth ~ 40 m) is a semiclosed estuarine area located in the southwestern part of the Caribbean Sea (South America). This large coastal–estuarine ecosystem operates as a biogeochemical reactor due to it featuring examples of high nutrient concentrations on the surface (NO 3- = 1619 μM; NO 2- = 0.505 μM; NH 4+ = 2.938 μM; PO 4 3- = 7.603 μM), high Chl α (max = 30.17; min = 0.02; mean = 9 mg m−3), as well as blooms of toxic algae, mostly Pseudo-nitzschia pseudodelicatissima. An outbreak of Tripos fusus causes bioluminescence and about 20 events of hypoxia (< 2–4 mg O 2 L−1) within a time series of 10 years. Despite this, information regarding the biological and biogeochemical oceanography (chlorophyll α, biomass, planktonic composition, nutrient cycling, mass balance of elements, and interannual variability) remains non-existent. Therefore, elucidating an ecosystem’s thresholds for various features is necessary for managing marine ecosystems, and especially for climate change projections. We here present a review of the functioning of this estuary, evaluating and reviewing each aspect of oceanographic variability.