To understand the effects of the Yellow Sea Cold Bottom Water (YSCBW) on the diel vertical migration (D- VM) of the copepod Calanus sinicus, we surveyed vertical distribution of C. sinicus at a fixed station in th...To understand the effects of the Yellow Sea Cold Bottom Water (YSCBW) on the diel vertical migration (D- VM) of the copepod Calanus sinicus, we surveyed vertical distribution of C. sinicus at a fixed station in the Yellow Sea before (spring) and during (summer) formation of the YSCBW. Cold water (〈10℃) was observed in the bottom layer when the water column was thermally stratified in summer, but the water column was thermally well-mixed in spring 2010. Samples were collected from five different layers at 3-h intervals using an opening-closing net. Adult females (1-155 ind./m3) showed a clear normal DVM pattern throughout the entire water column in spring, whereas adult males did not migrate. DVM of copepodite V (CV) individuals was not clear, but the maximum abundance of CI-CIV occurred consistently in the upper 10-20 m layer, where there was a high concentration of chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) (0.49-1.19μg/L). In summer, weak DVM was limited to cold waters beneath the thermocline for adult females (〈30 ind./m3), but not for adult males. The maximum abundance of CI-CIV also occurred consistently in the subsurface layer (20-40 m) together with high concentrations of Chl-a (0.81-2.36 μg/L). CV individuals (1-272 ind./m3) moved slightly upward noc- turnally to the near-surface layer (10-20 m), where the average temperature was 25.74℃, but they were not found in the surface layer (0-10 m; 28.31℃). These results indicate that the existence of the YSBCW affected food availability at depth and the vertical temperature distribution, leading to variation in the amplitude and shape of stage-specific vertical distributions (CI to adults) in C. sinicus before and during the formation of cold waters in the Yellow Sea during the study period.展开更多
The absolute and relative rates of rise of the sea level are computed for the New York City area by coupling global positioning system records of the position of fixed domes nearby tide gauges,with the tide gauges’re...The absolute and relative rates of rise of the sea level are computed for the New York City area by coupling global positioning system records of the position of fixed domes nearby tide gauges,with the tide gauges’records.Two tide gauges are considered,one long-term trend,more reliable,The Battery,in lower Manhattan,and one shorter,less reliable,Sandy Hook,in New Jersey.The relative rates of rise of the sea level are+2.851 and+4.076 mm/yr.The subsidence rates are-2.151 and-3.076 mm/yr.The absolute rates of rise of the sea level are+0.7 and+1.0 mm/yr.The relative sea-level acceleration,reliable only in The Battery,is about+0.008 mm/yr².This acceleration is about the same as the world average long-term trend tide gauge,as well as the average long-term trend tide gauge of the East Coast of North America.The absolute rate of rise of the sea level by 2050 in the lower Manhattan area will be likely less than 30 mm,and the absolute rate of rise of the sea level by 2100 likely less than 80 mm.The relative rate of rise of the sea level by 2050 in the Manhattan area will be likely 85 mm,and the relative rate of rise of the sea level by 2100 likely 228 mm,because of the overwhelming subsidence contribution.展开更多
基金The study on the impact of the Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water Mass to the ecosystem(YES Coldwater:PE99165)part of the Korea-China cooperative project on the Yellow Sea Cold Water Mass
文摘To understand the effects of the Yellow Sea Cold Bottom Water (YSCBW) on the diel vertical migration (D- VM) of the copepod Calanus sinicus, we surveyed vertical distribution of C. sinicus at a fixed station in the Yellow Sea before (spring) and during (summer) formation of the YSCBW. Cold water (〈10℃) was observed in the bottom layer when the water column was thermally stratified in summer, but the water column was thermally well-mixed in spring 2010. Samples were collected from five different layers at 3-h intervals using an opening-closing net. Adult females (1-155 ind./m3) showed a clear normal DVM pattern throughout the entire water column in spring, whereas adult males did not migrate. DVM of copepodite V (CV) individuals was not clear, but the maximum abundance of CI-CIV occurred consistently in the upper 10-20 m layer, where there was a high concentration of chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) (0.49-1.19μg/L). In summer, weak DVM was limited to cold waters beneath the thermocline for adult females (〈30 ind./m3), but not for adult males. The maximum abundance of CI-CIV also occurred consistently in the subsurface layer (20-40 m) together with high concentrations of Chl-a (0.81-2.36 μg/L). CV individuals (1-272 ind./m3) moved slightly upward noc- turnally to the near-surface layer (10-20 m), where the average temperature was 25.74℃, but they were not found in the surface layer (0-10 m; 28.31℃). These results indicate that the existence of the YSBCW affected food availability at depth and the vertical temperature distribution, leading to variation in the amplitude and shape of stage-specific vertical distributions (CI to adults) in C. sinicus before and during the formation of cold waters in the Yellow Sea during the study period.
文摘The absolute and relative rates of rise of the sea level are computed for the New York City area by coupling global positioning system records of the position of fixed domes nearby tide gauges,with the tide gauges’records.Two tide gauges are considered,one long-term trend,more reliable,The Battery,in lower Manhattan,and one shorter,less reliable,Sandy Hook,in New Jersey.The relative rates of rise of the sea level are+2.851 and+4.076 mm/yr.The subsidence rates are-2.151 and-3.076 mm/yr.The absolute rates of rise of the sea level are+0.7 and+1.0 mm/yr.The relative sea-level acceleration,reliable only in The Battery,is about+0.008 mm/yr².This acceleration is about the same as the world average long-term trend tide gauge,as well as the average long-term trend tide gauge of the East Coast of North America.The absolute rate of rise of the sea level by 2050 in the lower Manhattan area will be likely less than 30 mm,and the absolute rate of rise of the sea level by 2100 likely less than 80 mm.The relative rate of rise of the sea level by 2050 in the Manhattan area will be likely 85 mm,and the relative rate of rise of the sea level by 2100 likely 228 mm,because of the overwhelming subsidence contribution.