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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2010 Apr 20.
Published in final edited form as: J Geophys Res. 2006 Nov 7;111(C11003):1–46. doi: 10.1029/2004JC002813

Figure 11.

Figure 11

Mineral dust (blue) at Miami and red tides (dashed line) on the West Florida shelf during 1998–2001. Saharan dust events of low non-sea-salt nitrate are denoted by arrows, with the red ones indicating concurrent wet deposition (i.e., 24–48 hr delay) at Tampa Airport of >1.0 mm rainfall. Pink squares indicate mean dissolved Fe concentrations at ECOHAB stations within the surface waters of the outer west Florida shelf (50–200 m isobaths). The weekly means of the daily alongshore integrals of K. brevis populations are the dashed line of surface abundances (104–106 cells l–1) within 9 km of the west Florida coast, from off Cedar Key to near Cape Romano.