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Distributions of nutrients in the East China Sea and the South China Sea connection

Journal

JOURNAL OF OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 64, Issue 5, Pages 737-751

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10872-008-0062-9

Keywords

nutrients; Kuroshio; East China Sea; South China Sea; teleconnection; fluxes

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Funding

  1. National Science Council of the Republic of China, Taiwan [NSC 96-2621-Z-110-002, 96-2628-M-110-002-MY3]
  2. Top University Plan [95C 0312]

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Surface maps of nitrate, phosphate and silicate of the East China Sea (ECS) have been constructed and are described. Reports on exchanges of material between the ECS and the South China Sea (SCS) through the Taiwan Strait are reviewed. Recent advances seem to have reversed the earlier view that the SCS exports nutrients to the ECS through the Taiwan Strait. This is because the northward flow of seawater in (lie summer carries little nutrient. On the other hand, the waters flowing southward along the coast of China in winter carry orders of magnitude higher nutrient concentrations. The outflow of subsurface waters from the SCS, however, is the major source of new nutrients to the ECS continental shelves because these subsurface waters flow out of the Luzon Strait,join the northwardly flowing Kuroshio and enter the Okinawa trough. Around 10% of the nutrients exported from the SCS through the Luzon Strait upwell onto the ECS shelf. These inputs are larger than the aggregate of all the rivers that empty into the ECS, contributing 49% of the externally sourced nitrogen, 71% of the phosphorous, and 54% of the silica for the ECS.

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