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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/22405
Title: The Impact of Eddies on Nutrient Supply, Diatom Biomass and Carbon Export in the Northern South China Sea
Authors: Shih, Yung-Yen
Hung, Chin-Chang
Tuo, Sing-how
Shao, Huan-Jie
Chow, Chun Hoe 
Muller, Francois L. L.
Cai, Yuan-Hong
Keywords: eddy;nutrient;diatom;carbon flux;South China Sea;subsurface chlorophyll (phytoplankton) maximum
Issue Date: 8-Dec-2020
Publisher: FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Journal Volume: 8
Source: FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Abstract: 
We have investigated the effect of eddies (cold and warm eddies, CEs and WEs) on the nutrient supply to the euphotic zone and the organic carbon export from the euphotic zone to deeper parts of the water column in the northern South China Sea. Besides basic hydrographic and biogeochemical parameters, the flux of particulate organic carbon (POC), a critical index of the strength of the oceanic biological pump, was also measured at several locations within two CEs and one WE using floating sediment traps deployed below the euphotic zone. The POC flux associated with the CEs (85 +/- 55 mg-C m(-2) d(-1)) was significantly higher than that associated with the WE (20 +/- 7 mg-C m(-2) d(-1)). This was related to differences in the density structure of the water column between the two types of eddies. Within the core of the WE, downwelling created intense stratification which hindered the upward mixing of nutrients and favored the growth of small phytoplankton species. Near the periphery of the WE, nutrient replenishment from below did take place, but only to a limited extent. By far the strongest upwelling was associated with the CEs, bringing nutrients into the lower portion (similar to 50 m) of the euphotic zone and fueling the growth of larger-cell phytoplankton such as centric diatoms (e.g., Chaetoceros, Coscinodiscus) and dinoflagellates (e.g., Ceratium). A significant finding that emerged from all the results was the positive relationship between the phytoplankton carbon content in the subsurface layer (where the chlorophyll a maximum occurs) and the POC flux to the deep sea.
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/22405
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2020.537332
Appears in Collections:海洋環境資訊系

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