Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6382992 Continental Shelf Research 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Nutrients dynamics were investigated in the southeastern East China Sea.•Less-saline water from Chinese coastal waters was carried east by the Kuroshio.•Less-saline water supplied excess nitrate to the Kuroshio subsurface layer.

Vertical profiles of nutrient concentration were investigated in the southeastern East China Sea and the Kuroshio (30°N-31°N, 128°E-130°E) in June 2013, in order to understand the effects of less-saline water intrusions on nutrient composition. The ratio of nitrate to phosphate is commonly <16; however, values >16 were observed in the northern edge of the Kuroshio at a depth of 50-100 m at the beginning of June, associated with a less-saline water intrusion with a density (σt) of 23.5-24.8. This less-saline water was not present at the end of June. A positive excess nitrate concentration was found in water with a salinity of <34.17, revealing a significant negative correlation between salinity and excess nitrate concentrations. This less-saline excess-nitrate water originated from winter mixing of the East China Sea coastal waters, which were affected by the Changjiang River according to a back-trajectory analysis, and was transported to the east by the Kuroshio >500 km away from the source. The excess-nitrate water existed below the euphotic layer, and it prevented the utilization of nutrients by the phytoplankton during the transportation. The intrusion of this less-saline water increased the nitrate to phosphate ratio and supplied excess nitrate to the Kuroshio subsurface layer.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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