Intrusion of low-salinity water into the Yellow Sea Interior in 2012 SCIE SCOPUS KCI

Cited 14 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 16 time in Scopus
Title
Intrusion of low-salinity water into the Yellow Sea Interior in 2012
Author(s)
Oh, Kyung-Hee; Lee, Joon-Ho; Lee, Seok; Pang, Ig-Chan
KIOST Author(s)
Oh, Kyung Hee(오경희)Lee, Seok(이석)
Alternative Author(s)
오경희; 이석
Publication Year
2014-12
Abstract
Abnormally low-salinity water was detected in the surface layer of the central region of the Yellow Sea in August 2012. The presence of such low-salinity water in the Yellow Sea interior has never been reported previously. To understand the origin of this low-salinity water, oceanographic and wind data were analyzed, and the circulation of the surface layer was also examined in the Yellow and East China Seas using a numerical ocean model. The results confirmed that typhoons caused the low-salinity water. Two consecutive typhoons passed from east to west across the East China Sea, around the Changjiang Bank in early August 2012. Strong easterly and southeasterly winds created by the typhoons in the Yellow and East China Seas drove the low-salinity water to the north along the coast of China and northeastward toward the central region of the Yellow Sea, respectively. Usually, the northward drifting of Changjiang Diluted Water along the coast of China ends around the Jiangsu coast, where the drifting is blocked and is turned by the offshore Eulerian residual current. Therefore, the Changjiang Diluted Water does not intrude more into the Yellow Sea interior. However, in 2012, the low-salinity water drifted up to the Shandong Peninsula along the coast of China, and formed massive low-salinity water in the Yellow Sea interior combining with the other low-salinity water extended toward the central region of the Yellow Sea directly from the Changjiang Bank. Thus, the typhoons play a key role in the appearance of abnormally low-salinity water in the Yellow Sea interior and it means that the Yellow Sea ecosystem could be significantly influenced by the Changjiang Diluted Water.
ISSN
1738-5261
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/2655
DOI
10.1007/s12601-014-0032-7
Bibliographic Citation
OCEAN SCIENCE JOURNAL, v.49, no.4, pp.343 - 356, 2014
Publisher
한국해양과학기술원
Keywords
low-salinity water intrusion; Yellow Sea; Changjiang Diluted Water; typhoon; easterly and southeasterly winds
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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