from Chapter 36 - Overview of Marine Biological Diversity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 May 2017
Introduction
In this chapter we refer to the area of the Atlantic Ocean south of the Equator and north of the Polar Front (Antarctic Convergence). The main topographical feature in the South Atlantic is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge which runs between Africa and South America from approximately 58° South to Iceland in the north. A rift valley is associated with the Ridge. The Ridge is of volcanic origin and the development of transverse ridges creates a number of basins: the Argentine, Brazil, Guinea, Angola and Cape Basins.
The Atlantic coast of South America is influenced by three major rivers, Orinoco, Amazon and La Plata, that discharge large amounts of freshwater and sediment into the Atlantic Ocean. The Amazon discharges about one-fifth of the world's total freshwater runoff into the Atlantic (Curtin, 1986) and it is transported offshore up to 500 km seaward (Lentz, 1995). The heavy sediment discharge (2.9 ・ 108 tons year)-1) is not deposited over the outer shelf, but is carried by the North Brazil Current to Guyana's shelf, where it forms extensive mud deposits (Gratiot et al., 2008). The continental shelf is wider along its West Coast, both in the north at the Amazon (≈300 km) and in southern Argentina, where it reaches up to 600 kilometres (Miloslavich et al., 2011). The shelf is narrower along the East Coast of the Atlantic and also along the east coast of Brazil, where riverine muds give way to calcareous deposits and the shelf in some areas reaches a minimum of 8 km width (Miloslavich et al., 2011).
The continental slope is cut by deep canyons connecting shelf and deep waters. High benthic richness was reported at the head of the submarine canyons, and about half of the species are shared with the shelf-break community (Bertolino et al., 2007; Schejter et al., 2014b). The ∼7500 km of the Brazil coasts comprise a combination of freshwater, estuarine and marine ecosystems, with diverse but poorly known habitats in its northern part and with sandy beaches, mangrove forests, rocky shores, lagoons and coral reefs to the south (Miloslavich et al., 2011). Uruguay's coasts are dominated by sandy beaches; a narrow rocky portion has high biodiversity (Calliari et al., 2003).
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