Spatial and temporal variability of downward particle fluxes on a
continental slope: Lessons from an 8-yr experiment
in the Gulf of Lions (NW Mediterranean)
Serge Heussner
a,
⁎
, Xavier Durrieu de Madron
a
, Antonio Calafat
b
, Miquel Canals
b
,
Jacques Carbonne
a
, Nicole Delsaut
a
, Gilles Saragoni
a
a
CEFREM, UMR 5110 CNRS-University of Perpignan Via Domitia 52 avenue Paul Alduy, 66860 Perpignan Cedex, France
b
GRC Geociències Marines, Dept. Estratigrafia, P. i Geociències Marines University of Barcelona,
C/Marti i Franqués s/n, 08028 Barcelona, Spain
Accepted 5 September 2006
Abstract
A long-term experiment of downward particle fluxes and currents has been initiated in 1993 on the continental slope of the Gulf
of Lions (NW Mediterranean) and pursued within the frame of several French and European projects (PNEC, Euromarge-NB, MTP
II-MATER, EUROSTRATAFORM). Sediment traps and current meters were deployed at several locations on this slope deeply
incised by numerous canyons, with an extensive spatial coverage for the first 2 years (canyons at the entrance, middle and exit of
the gulf with respect to the general along-slope circulation, head and mid-canyon depths, adjacent open slope). From late 1995
onwards, this design was reduced to the two mid-canyon moorings at the entrance and exit of the gulf. Monthly fluxes and hourly
temperatures and currents were recorded at 500 m (30 m above bottom, mab) in the canyon heads, at 500 and 1000 m (respectively
530 and 30 mab) nominal depths at the mid-canyon sites, and at 750 m (30 mab) open slope.
This study aims at describing the spatial, seasonal and interannual variability of flux intensity and composition of settling
particles, and at analyzing the role of diverse forcings in the control of particle exchange across the margin. Results from the first
8 years (1993–2001) show that total mass fluxes – in the 10
1
–10
4
mg m
- 2
d
- 1
range – increase along slope, particularly for the
near-bottom traps, between the NE (Planier Canyon) and the SW (Lacaze-Duthiers Canyon) limits of the Gulf of Lions, indicating
an increased shelf export of particulate matter in the western part of the system. Bulk chemical composition (organic matter,
carbonate, opal and lithogenic fraction) remained rather stable during the course of the experiment, tending towards values typical
of superficial shelf sediments at higher mass fluxes. First-order calculations using a simple two-component mixing model suggest a
decreasing contribution of primary particles settling out of the overlying waters to the total flux from the entrance towards the exit
of the system. Particulate material transferred to the deeper slope in the southwestern part of the Gulf of Lions appears therefore to
predominantly originate in resuspended shelf and/or upper slope sediment. Downward particle fluxes and potential forcing
parameters exhibit a high seasonal variability, with higher values from late autumn to early spring. Furthermore, unprecedented
winter flux peaks observed in 1999 dominated the interannual differences, which otherwise were quite limited. Correlations
between sources of particulate material on the shelf (i.e., river and atmospheric inputs, phytoplankton biomass and sediment
Marine Geology 234 (2006) 63 – 92
www.elsevier.com/locate/margeo
⁎
Corresponding author. Tel.: +33 4 68662089; fax: +33 4 68662096.
E-mail address: heussner@univ-perp.fr (S. Heussner).
0025-3227/$ - see front matter © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2006.09.003