Contribution of the offshore detachment of Changjiang (Yangtze River) Diluted Water to the formation of hypoxia in summer

2020 
Abstract The Changjiang (Yangtze River) Diluted Water (CDW) plume substantially impacts the biogeochemical processes off the estuary and its adjacent area, resulting in considerable environmental and ecological effects. Based on survey data in the northeastern area off the Changjiang Estuary (CE) obtained in the summers of 2008 and 2013, the hypoxia induced by the offshore detached CDW plume and the associated controlling mechanisms were investigated. The results show that the offshore transport of the CDW plume caused a dispersed low-salinity area in the northeastern area off the CE during summer, in sharp contrast with the surrounding high-salinity and high-density waters. There was a hypoxic area with low-pH (i.e., acidification) near the 40-m isobath in bottom waters in the northeastern area off the CE, and its position generally corresponded to the surface offshore CDW plume. In the area affected by the offshore low-salinity water, the surface patch-like phytoplankton bloom and the organic debris produced in situ were the material drivers of the bottom oxygen consumption and led to the corresponding relationship between the bottom hypoxic zone and the high chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) area at the surface. We consider that the local stratification caused by the offshore low-salinity water and the stable environment within the detached CDW plume constituted the external dynamic conditions for maintaining the bottom hypoxia. Our results demonstrate that the offshore detached CDW plume in the northeastern area off the CE may contribute to the formation of a local hypoxic center with low pH. This study would provide basis for understanding of the physical-biogeochemical processes and environmental responses in the offshore areas of the CDW plume.
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