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  1. National Taiwan Ocean University Research Hub
  2. 海洋科學與資源學院
  3. 海洋環境與生態研究所
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/12328
Title: The contrasting behaviors of CO2 systems in river-dominated and ocean dominated continental shelves: A case study in the East China Sea and the Peter the Great Bay of the Japan/East Sea in summer 2014
Authors: Chou, Wen-Chen 
Tishchenko, Pavel Y.
Chuang, Kai-Yung
Gong, Gwo-Ching 
Shkirnikova, Elena M.
Tishchenko, Petr P.
Keywords: CARBON-DIOXIDE;SEASONAL-VARIATION;WATER;EXCHANGE;FLUXES;DISSOCIATION;SEAWATER;ACID;CONSTANTS;MARGINS
Issue Date: 20-Oct-2017
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Journal Volume: 195
Start page/Pages: 50-60
Source: MAR CHEM
Abstract: 
In this study, we investigated the CO2 system in two distinct continental shelf systems in the Northwest Pacific in the summer of 2014. The East China Sea (ECS) is a river-dominated shelf system, and the Peter the Great Bay (PGB) of the Japan/East Sea represents an ocean-dominated shelf system. The results show that the PGB acted as a source of atmospheric CO2, while the ECS was a sink. We suggest that the observed divergent behavior, in terms of CO2 absorption, may result from differences in the river runoff received. Under the influence of the Changjiang River, the nutrient discharge into the ECS is much higher than that into the PGB, where only a few small rivers act as inputs. The high nutrient discharge may stimulate high biological production, which may consume CO2, driving the ECS to act as a CO2 sink despite its high temperature in summer. The temperature effect may dominate the effect of biological production in the PGB because of its limited riverine nutrient inputs. We found that external CO2 sources from the adjacent open ocean could explain the source, status of the PGB. This finding agrees with the Ocean-dominated Margin (OceMar) hypothesis, which has only been tested using data from tropical marginal seas. The present data set from the PGB, thus, provides the first example to support that the OceMar hypothesis may also be applicable in high latitude shelf systems.
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/12328
ISSN: 0304-4203
DOI: 10.1016/j.marchem.2017.04.005
Appears in Collections:海洋環境與生態研究所
13 CLIMATE ACTION
15 LIFE ON LAND

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