Previous hypotheses had suggested that upwelled intrusions of nutrient‐rich Gulf of Mexico slope water onto the West Florida Shelf (WFS) led to formation of red tides of Karenia brevis. However, coupled biophysical models of (1) wind‐ and buoyancy‐driven circulation, (2) three phytoplankton groups (diatoms, K. brevis, and microflagellates), (3) these slope water supplies of nitrate and silicate, and (4) selective grazing stress by copepods and protozoans found that diatoms won in one 1998 case of no light limitation by colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM). The diatoms lost to K. brevis during another CDOM case of the models. In the real world, field data confirmed that diatoms were indeed the dominant phytoplankton after massive upwellin...
Independent data from the Gulf of Mexico are used to develop and test the hypothesis that the same s...
The West Florida Shelf (WFS), typically characterized as being oligotrophic, is one of the most prod...
A system of ten coupled ordinary differential equations was developed to investigate the time-depend...
Previous hypotheses had suggested that upwelled intrusions of nutrient‐rich Gulf of Mexico slope wat...
A coupled, three-dimensional, time-dependent numerical model of water circulation, spectral light, p...
A one-dimensional (1-D) ecological model, HABSIM, examined the initiation and maintenance of the 200...
The development of accurate predictive models of toxic dinoflagellate blooms is of great ecological ...
Biogeochemical models that simulate realistic lower-trophic-level dynamics, including the represent...
A simple ecological model, coupled to a primitive equation circulation model, is able to replicate t...
Biogeochemical models that simulate realistic lower-trophic-level dynamics, including the representa...
Over the past two decades, the two most anomalous years for water properties on the west Florida con...
Diatom blooms dominated by Rhizosolenia sp. develop annually in northwestern Florida Bay. The annual...
The clear, shallow, oligotrophic waters of Florida Bay are characterized by low phytoplankton biomas...
Independent data from the Gulf of Mexico are used to develop and test the hypothesis that the same s...
The West Florida Shelf (WFS), typically characterized as being oligotrophic, is one of the most prod...
A system of ten coupled ordinary differential equations was developed to investigate the time-depend...
Previous hypotheses had suggested that upwelled intrusions of nutrient‐rich Gulf of Mexico slope wat...
A coupled, three-dimensional, time-dependent numerical model of water circulation, spectral light, p...
A one-dimensional (1-D) ecological model, HABSIM, examined the initiation and maintenance of the 200...
The development of accurate predictive models of toxic dinoflagellate blooms is of great ecological ...
Biogeochemical models that simulate realistic lower-trophic-level dynamics, including the represent...
A simple ecological model, coupled to a primitive equation circulation model, is able to replicate t...
Biogeochemical models that simulate realistic lower-trophic-level dynamics, including the representa...
Over the past two decades, the two most anomalous years for water properties on the west Florida con...
Diatom blooms dominated by Rhizosolenia sp. develop annually in northwestern Florida Bay. The annual...
The clear, shallow, oligotrophic waters of Florida Bay are characterized by low phytoplankton biomas...
Independent data from the Gulf of Mexico are used to develop and test the hypothesis that the same s...
The West Florida Shelf (WFS), typically characterized as being oligotrophic, is one of the most prod...
A system of ten coupled ordinary differential equations was developed to investigate the time-depend...