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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/3617
Title: Yangtze River floods enhance coastal ocean phytoplankton biomass and potential fish production
Authors: Gwo-Ching Gong 
Kon-Kee Liu
Kuo-Ping Chiang 
Tung-Ming Hsiung
Jeng Chang 
Chung-Chi Chen
Chin-Chang Hung
Wen-Chen Chou 
Chih-Ching Chung 
Hung-Yu Chen 
Fuh-Kwo Shiah
An-Yi Tsai 
Hung-Jen Lee 
Hung-Yu Chen 
An-Yi Tsai 
Chih-hao Hsieh
Jen-Chieh Shiao
Chun Mao Tseng
Shih-Chieh Hsu
Hung-Jen Lee 
Ming-An Lee 
I-I Lin
Fu-Jung Tsai 
Issue Date: 9-Jul-2011
Publisher: American Geophysical Union
Journal Volume: 38
Journal Issue: 13
Source: Geophysical Research Letters
Abstract: 
The occurrence of extreme weather conditions appears on the rise under current climate change conditions, resulting in more frequent and severe floods. The devastating floods in southern China in 2010 and eastern Australia 2010-2011, serve as a solemn testimony to that notion. Accompanying the excess runoffs, elevated amount of terrigenous materials, including nutrients for microalgae, are discharged to the coastal ocean. However, how these floods and the materials they carry affect the coastal ocean ecosystem is still poorly understood. Yangtze River (aka Changjiang), which is the largest river in the Eurasian continent, flows eastward and empties into the East China Sea. Since the early twentieth century, serious overflows of the Changjiang have occurred four times. During the two most recent ones in July 1998 and 2010, we found total primary production in the East China Sea reaching 147 × 103 tons carbon per day, which may support fisheries catch as high as 410 × 103 tons per month, about triple the amount during non-flooding periods based on direct field oceanographic observations. As the frequencies of floods increase world wide as a result of climate change, the flood-induced biological production could be a silver lining to the hydrological hazards and human and property losses inflicted by excessive precipitations.
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/3617
ISSN: 0094-8276
DOI: 10.1029/2011gl047519
Appears in Collections:海洋生物研究所

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