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Seasonal variations in chlorophyll and nutrients in a Canadian arctic estuary
Authors:E H Grainger  M S Evans
Institution:1. Arctic Biological Station, 555 St. Pierre Boulevard, H9X 3R4, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada
2. Great Lakes Research Division, University of Michigan, 48109, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Abstract:The Eskimo Lakes and Liverpool Bay constitute a series of estuarine waters to the Beaufort Sea in arctic Canada. Salinity ranges in summer from 20‰ at the mouth to less than 1‰ at the head of the system. Arctic features include an ice cover lasting for about 8 months annually and water temperatures which fluctuate from ?1°C in winter to as high as 12°C in late summer. Subsurface light is severely attenuated. Reactive phosphate varies from a spring high of 0.3 μg-at P per 1 to undetectable levels during summer. Nitrate is more abundant, and silicate is consistently plentiful. Chlorophyll a reaches a maximum only occasionally higher than 3 mg per m3 in June and July, rising from undetectable levels in winter. Photosynthetic rates are low by all standards, and have not been measured at greater than 6.4 mg C per m2 per hour in summer. Low levels of subsurface light and reactive phosphate and nitrate characterize this exceptionally oligotrophic arctic estuary.
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