Coastal Observation Using a Vertical Profiling System at the Southern Coast of Korea SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 4 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 5 time in Scopus
Title
Coastal Observation Using a Vertical Profiling System at the Southern Coast of Korea
Author(s)
Park, Young-Gyu; Seo, Seongbong; Kim, Dong Guk; Noh, Joocheul; Park, Hyuk Min
KIOST Author(s)
Park, Young Gyu(박영규)Kim, Dong Guk(김동국)Park, Hyuk Min(박혁민)
Alternative Author(s)
박영규; 서성봉; 김동국; 박혁민
Publication Year
2021-04
Abstract
At a coastal station near the southern coast of Korea, the vertical profiles of temperature salinity dissolved oxygen and velocity were obtained using a vertical profiler, Aqualog, every summer from 2016 to 2020. At the site, fishing activity was not allowed, and it was possible to maintain the profiler continuously and stably. It was set to travel every one or 2 h for two to 4 months. Thus, we were able to observe the variations of the water properties from hourly to monthly scales. The sensors were contaminated much less than we expected, and the data could be used without correction at least for our coastal applications. The main phenomena we observed are tides, coastal warming, fresh water, and responses to typhoons. On the daily time scale, the most prominent phenomenon is semi-diurnal tides, with which the thickness and temperature of coastal warm waters changed. The warm water also showed fluctuations between 10 and 15 days. The data also revealed that the tide showed strong seasonality. In summer, when the water is strongly stratified, the tidal current is baroclinic, while in winter, when the water is well mixed, the current is barotropic. Responses to typhoon induced winds were rather complicated. In one case, increase in the upper mixed layer was observed. The thick mixed layer disappeared in about a day due to advection. In another case the upper mixed layer became thinner, while the wind became stronger due the advection of the offshore water. Hydrographic observations conducted every 2 months, of course, or point measurement at a surface buoy could not show such continuous changes. More and more local fishermen are showing interest in oceanographic information, and data from the profiler could be of much use to them.
ISSN
2296-7745
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/42235
DOI
10.3389/fmars.2021.668733
Bibliographic Citation
FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, v.8, 2021
Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Keywords
coastal mooring; Aqualog; vertical profiling system; coastal warming; typhoon
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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