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  2. 海洋科學與資源學院
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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/17147
Title: Assessing Summertime Primary Production Required in Changed Marine Environments in Upwelling Ecosystems Around the Taiwan Bank
Authors: Hsiao, Po-Yuan
Shimada, Teruhisa
Lan, Kuo-Wei 
Lee, Ming-An 
Liao, Cheng-Hsin 
Keywords: SEA-SURFACE TEMPERATURE;SHELF-BREAK REGION;BOTTOM-UP CONTROL;MESOSCALE EDDIES;FEEDING-HABITS;TRACHURUS-JAPONICUS;CLIMATE-CHANGE;STRAIT;VARIABILITY;FISHERIES
Issue Date: Feb-2021
Publisher: MDPI
Journal Volume: 13
Journal Issue: 4
Source: REMOTE SENS-BASEL
Abstract: 
The Taiwan Bank (TB) is located in the southern Taiwan Strait, where the marine environments are affected by South China Sea Warm Current and Kuroshio Branch Current in summer. The bottom water flows upward along the edge of the continental shelf, forming an upwelling region that is an essential high-productivity fishing ground. Using trophic dynamic theory, fishery resources can be converted into primary production required (PPR) by primary production, which indicates the environmental tolerance of marine ecosystems. This study calculated the PPR of benthic and pelagic species, sea surface temperature (SST), upwelling size, and net primary production (NPP) to analyze fishery resource structure and the spatial distribution of PPR in upwelling, non-upwelling, and thermal front (frontal) areas of the TB in summer. Pelagic species, predominated by those in the Scombridae, Carangidae families and Trachurus japonicus, accounted for 77% of PPR (67% of the total catch). The benthic species were dominated by Mene maculata and members of the Loliginidae family. The upwelling intensity was the strongest in June and weakest in August. Generalized additive models revealed that the benthic species PPR in frontal habitats had the highest deviance explained (28.5%). Moreover, frontal habitats were influenced by NPP, which was also the main factor affecting the PPR of benthic species in all three habitats. Pelagic species were affected by high NPP, as well as low SST and negative values of the multivariate El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) index in upwelling habitats (16.9%) and non-upwelling habitats (11.5%). The composition of pelagic species varied by habitat; this variation can be ascribed to impacts from the ENSO. No significant differences were noted in benthic species composition. Overall, pelagic species resources are susceptible to climate change, whereas benthic species are mostly insensitive to climatic factors and are more affected by NPP.
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/17147
ISSN: 2072-4292
DOI: 10.3390/rs13040765
Appears in Collections:13 CLIMATE ACTION
14 LIFE BELOW WATER
15 LIFE ON LAND
環境生物與漁業科學學系

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