wxa51226

Credit: Posted on February 23, 2026 by AOML Communications to Hurricane Research, Observations, Oceans Influence on Climate & Weather, Physical Oceanography

wxb51226
wxc51226

Credit: NOAA

 

The Gulf is shaped by the Loop Current, a flow of warm Caribbean water that travels northward past the Yucatan Peninsula, curves through the eastern Gulf, and exits through the Straits of Florida. Feeding into the northern extension of this system is the Mississippi River plume, a vast outflow of nutrient-rich freshwater. Because freshwater is less dense than seawater, the plume tends to spread across the surface, forming a stratified ocean that resists vertical mixing.

wxd51226

Credit: NOAA

At the same time, the Gulf is dotted with cyclonic eddies which are spinning masses of water with cooler centers that naturally pull nutrient-rich water upward from the depths–a phenomenon known as upwelling. Where nutrients rise, microscopic marine plants called phytoplankton thrive, forming the base of the ocean food web.

wxe51226

Credit: NOAA

During the passage of a hurricane, strong vertical ocean mixing is common, but in analyzing the satellite data and ocean observations post-Idalia, the team found that the Mississippi River plume, rotational eddies, and Loop Current all played significant roles in how the Gulf responded to the storm.

The Mississippi River plume helped create a surface algae bloom by spreading chlorophyll sideways and preventing significant vertical seawater mixing (due to density differences). Meanwhile, Idalia’s powerful winds interacted with a nearby cyclonic eddy, intensifying its natural upwelling. This process seeded nitrate, a key nutrient for phytoplankton growth, into layers of the ocean roughly 20 to 50 meters below the surface. This upwelling of nutrients ultimately fueled a secondary, subsurface phytoplankton bloom, invisible to satellites, but detectable by the BGC-Argo.

wxf51226

Credit: NOAA

Reach meteorologist Rick DeLuca at RDeluca@wdrb.com, on Twitter or on Facebook. Copyright 2026. WDRB Media. All rights reserved.