Scientific Reports (Jan 2021)

Encountering shoaling internal waves on the dispersal pathway of the pearl river plume in summer

  • Jay Lee,
  • James T. Liu,
  • I-Huan Lee,
  • Ke-Hsien Fu,
  • Rick J. Yang,
  • Wenping Gong,
  • Jianping Gan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-80215-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Fundamentally, river plume dynamics are controlled by the buoyancy due to river effluent and mixing induced by local forcing such as winds and tides. Rarely the influence of far-field internal waves on the river plume dynamics is documented. Our 5-day fix-point measurements and underway acoustic profiling identified hydrodynamic processes on the dispersal pathway of the Pearl River plume. The river plume dispersal was driven by the SW monsoon winds that induced the intrusion of cold water near the bottom. The river effluent occupied the surface water, creating strong stratification and showing on-offshore variability due to tidal fluctuations. However, intermittent disruptions weakened stratification due to wind mixing and perturbations by nonlinear internal waves (NIWs) from the northern South China Sea (NSCS). During events of NIW encounter, significant drawdowns of the river plume up to 20 m occurred. The EOF deciphers and ranks the contributions of abovementioned processes: (1) the stratification/mixing coupled by wind-driven plume water and NIWs disruptions (81.7%); (2) the variation caused by tidal modulation (6.9%); and (3) the cold water intrusion induced by summer monsoon winds (5.1%). Our findings further improve the understanding of the Pearl River plume dynamics influenced by the NIWs from the NSCS.