Seasonal and inter-annual plankton variability in the Gulf of Trieste (northern Adriatic)

Abstract
Seasonal and inter-annual variability of environmental characteristics and of plankton were analysed based on monthly surveys of the physical structure of the water column, nutrients, phytoplankton, and zooplankton biomass and abundance in the Gulf of Trieste (1989–1995). Seasonal plankton dynamics were related to Soĉa River run-off, the main freshwater source, and peaks of autotrophic biomass were associated with extended periods of high freshwater inflow. Our results indicate that the freshwater discharge during spring was more important for annual phytobiomass than total yearly input. In 1993, which was characterized by a relatively high total annual freshwater input but by a dry spring, the lowest average chlorophyll biomass (0.85 μg l−1) and cumulative monthly mesozooplanktonic biomass (123 mg AFDW m−3) were observed over the entire period. Annual peaks of phytoplankton biomass were mainly due to increases in diatom abundance, while small-sized cells (microflagellates, coccolithophores) dominated during periods of low Chl a concentrations. Consumer community patterns followed autotrophic biomass evolution with high abundance of herbivores and mixed feeders in spring, and fine-filter feeders and planktonic protists during summer. A large inter-annual variability emphasizes the importance of long-term monitoring in areas like the Gulf of Trieste for distinguishing anthropogenic trends from natural variations of plankton.