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Chlorophyll monitoring on the Great
Barrier Reef
Increased nutrient availability, for example from human
activity (e.g. agricultural runoff, soil erosion, discharges of
sewage and aquaculture waste), usually leads to a rise in
chlorophyll concentrations in coastal waters because of increased
phytoplankton biomass. Phytoplankton can rapidly deplete
nutrients to levels which would be difficult to sample and
analyse directly.
Concentrations of the plant pigment "chlorophyll a"
(which occurs in all marine phytoplankton) provide a useful proxy
indicator of the amount of nutrients incorporated into
phytoplankton biomass, because phytoplankton have predictable
nutrient-to-chlorophyll ratios. Chlorophyll a is the most
commonly used parameter for monitoring phytoplankton biomass and
nutrient status, as an index of water quality.
The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA)
initiated this program in December 1992 as a long-term water
quality monitoring program.
Chlorophyll monitoring has been managed by AIMS since 1999 and
is an important part of AIMS' water quality research and
monitoring activities. Since 2005, chlorophyll monitoring has
been a component of the Reef
Plan Marine Monitoring Program, a responsibility of GBRMPA
under the Reef
Water Quality Protection Plan.
A number of cross-shelf transects and coastal stations are
regularly sampled along the length of the GBR. See map of
sampling sites and
Get
Data
Results to date show that compared with coastal regions in
other parts of the world, chlorophyll a concentrations in the GBR
lagoon are generally low. Chlorophyll a concentrations vary
across the shelf seasonally and also with latitude. There are
also persistent local gradients in chlorophyll a concentration,
usually away from the coast. Consistent long-term trends in
chlorophyll a concentrations havent yet been discerned.
Related links:
Sampling
Methods
November 28, 2007
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