6 resultados para Ria Formosa - Algarve
em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal
Resumo:
Shell growth of the whelk Nassarius (¼Hinia) reticulatus was studied in the Ria de Aveiro (north-west Portugal) between 1995 and 1998. Temporal analysis of shell height frequency distributions demonstrated that growth occurs during the ¢rst ¢ve years of life, whelks attaining a size of 6.7^7.8 mm in the 1st year, 12.1^14.5 mm in the 2nd year, 18^19.5 mm in the 3rd year, 22.7^23.6 mm in the 4th year and by the 5th year males have achieved an average size of 25 mm whilst females have reached 27 mm. Age estimates from internal microscopic annual growth lines present in the shell lip suggest that large whelks may achieve a longevity of at least 11 years. External annual rings become less discernible as the whelks increase in size and estimates of their age based solely on ring counts can underestimate their age. In males sexual maturation is reached between the 3rd and 4th years whilst in females it is attained between the 4th and 5th years. Imposex was visible in 2 year old females and attained maximum development by the 5th year.
Resumo:
The Ria de Aveiro estuary-coastal lagoon system of northern Portugal is estimated to currently receive mean annual influxes of total nitrogen (N) and total phosphorus (P) of c. 6118 t y−1 and 779 t y−1, respectively, from its influent rivers. In low summer flows the mean N and P fluxes decrease to c. 10% of the annual average. The sewage contribution to the inland-derived N load on an annual basis is c. 5% but, during the summer low flow conditions, the sewage component increases to c. 65% of the total river loading. The sewage contribution to the inland-derived P load on an annual basis is c. 11% but, during the dry season, it is 1.2 times larger than the river-derived flux. The construction of a regional sewer system linked to a submarine outfall, due for completion in 2005, is expected to lead to a reduction in nutrient fluxes from inland to the lagoon of c. 15% for N and c. 26% for P relative to the present values. While this system will reduce the nutrient loading in the upper reaches of the lagoon, an increase in nutrients derived from the ocean is anticipated, due to the proximity of the outfall to the inlet.
Resumo:
Cette étude concerne un écosystème paralique, la lagune d’Aveiro (Portugal). Elle vise à déterminer l’organisation des peuplements de poissons en fonction des caractéristiques et du fonctionnement de cet écosystème. L’ichtyofaune a été échantillonnée mensuellement en 10 stations d’août 1987 à juillet 1988 et de janvier 1999 à décembre 2000, avec une seine de plage traditionnelle. La répartition des peuplements de poissons est étudiée au moyen de descripteurs populationnels (richesses spécifique et familiale, densité, biomasse et indice de diversité) et d’analyses statistiques (groupements et ordination). La lagune d’Aveiro présente de fortes variations, dans l’espace et le temps, de ses paramètres physico- chimiques reflétant ainsi les variations climatiques annuelles. Si l’on considère la mobilité des poissons et la géomorphologie et l’hydrologie du système étudié, nous pouvions nous attendre à une forte homogénéité de la distribution des poissons. À l’inverse, une diminution de l’influence marine a pour conséquence une diminution des richesses spécifiques et familiales, de la densité et de la biomasse. Nous avons également observé une modification de composition de l’assemblage de poissons et la présence d’espèces dominantes caractéristiques des différents niveaux de confinement (taux de renouvellement des eaux marines en un point donné du système). Le peuplement de poissons présente une organisation semblable à la zonation biologique, indépendamment des paramètres physico-chimiques tels que la salinité, décrite par la macrofaune benthique et induite par le confinement. La comparaison des résultats avec des données obtenues douze ans plus tôt, montre que l’organisation générale de la lagune est demeurée inchangée, illustrant ainsi la stabilité des écosystèmes paraliques. De plus, des modifications du niveau de confinement dans les marges nord et sud, induites principalement par des changements locaux de l’hydrodynamisme, ont été constatées. Le déconfinement de la zone nord est la conséquence de l’entretien des canaux de navigation par dragage. À l’inverse, le confinement de la zone sud est l’évolution naturelle des bassins paraliques soumis souvent à une sédimentation élevée et rapide. Cette étude montre que l’organisation du peuplement de poissons valide le concept du confinement pour l’organisation biologique des milieux paraliques, et peut être employé pour expliquer les changements de ces écosystèmes.
Resumo:
This paper describes a sediment survey undertaken to unravel patterns of distribution and dispersion of trace metals in an Iberian Peninsula northwestern coastal lagoon (Ria de Aveiro). Cadmium, lead, chromium, copper and zinc were analyzed in bottom sediments. Geochemical normalization is performed and two different regression models for each metal versus aluminum are tested and compared using the respective enrichment factors (EF), an estimation of the relative importance of anthropogenic contributions to the studied sediments. Mean sediment quality guideline quotients (mSQGQ) are used to evaluate sediment quality and associated potential risk to biota with effects range low as empirical sediment quality guideline (SQG) in the basis for mSQGQ calculation. Additionally, the geoaccumulation index is calculated to compare studied sediment levels to global baseline levels. The application of SQGs revealed insufficient characterization capability, especially when contrasted to EF calculated from the regression methods. These pointed a mildly enriched system with localized “hot spot” areas. Therefore, it can be considered that bottom sediments in the Ria de Aveiro system are in their majority unpolluted, zinc being the only metal of concern, presenting enrichment in all four main channels. The major rivers outlets (Caster, Antuã, and Vouga) constitute point sources, thus presenting potential risk for biota. Yet, the strong tidal influence creates a damping effect by efficiently redistributing sediment bound metals.
Resumo:
A “Bacia do Algarve” corresponde, segundo a literatura científica tradicional, aos terrenos mesocenozóicos que orlam o Sul de Portugal, desde o Cabo de São Vicente ao rio Guadiana (~140km), penetrando irregularmente para o interior entre 3 km a 25 km, sobre terrenos de idade carbónica da Zona Sul Portuguesa. O hiato, de aproximadamente 70 milhões de anos, materializado pela discordância angular entre as rochas sedimentares de tipo flysch do Carbónico, metamorfizadas e deformadas durante a orogenia varisca, e as rochas sedimentares continentais do Triásico inferior provável, separa dois ciclos de Wilson. Os sedimentos carbónicos metamorfizados resultam do empilhamento orogénico de um possível prisma de acrecção associado à orogenia varisca e ao fecho de um oceano paleozóico e formação da Pangeia, enquanto que os sedimentos continentais triásicos resultam do fim do colapso e do arrasamento do orógeno varisco e início do estiramento continental que viriam a culminar com a separação das placas litosféricas África, Eurásia e América.Os sedimentos mais recentes do Mesozóico e os mais antigos bem datados do Cenozóico encontram-se separados por um outro hiato que ultrapassa ligeiramente os 70 milhões de anos na área emersa. Este hiato resulta duma alteração tectónica radical no contexto onde nessa época geológica se inseria a Bacia do Algarve. Esta mudança, que ocorreu no fim do Cenomaniano, resultou da rotação do vector de deslocamento da trajectória de África em relação à Eurásia, de aproximadamente NW-SE para SW-NE (segundo as coordenadas actuais, e.g. Dewey et al, 1989), poria termo ao regime distensivo e de bacia de tipo rifte na Bacia do Algarve, com o fim do regime transtensivo entre a região noroeste da placa África e sudoeste da placa Eurásia e início da colisão.
Resumo:
Today the Ria de Aveiro of northern Portugal has a hydromorphological regime in which river influence is limited to periods of flood. For most of the annual cycle, tidal currents and wind waves are the major forcing agents in this complex coastal lagoon–estuarine system. The system has evolved over two centuries from one that was naturally fluvially dominant to one that is today tidally dominant. Human influence was a trigger for these changes, starting in 1808 when its natural evolution was halted by the construction of a new inlet/outlet channel through the mobile sand spit that isolates it from the Atlantic Ocean. In consequence, tidal ranges in the lagoon increased rapidly from ~0.1 m to >1 m and continued to increase, as a result of continued engineering works and dredging, today reaching ~3 m on spring tides. Hydromorphological adjustments that have taken place include the deepening of channels, an increase in the area of inter-tidal flats, regression of salt marsh, increased tidal propagation and increased saline intrusion. Loss of once abundant submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV), due to increased tidal flows, exacerbated by increased recreational activities, has been accompanied by a change from fine cohesive sediments to coarser, mobile sediments with reduced biological activity.