Frontiers in Marine Science (Oct 2019)

A Yellow Sea Monitoring Platform and Its Scientific Applications

  • Yong Sun Kim,
  • Chan Joo Jang,
  • Chan Joo Jang,
  • Jae Hoon Noh,
  • Jae Hoon Noh,
  • Kyung-Tae Kim,
  • Jae-Il Kwon,
  • Yongchim Min,
  • Jongmin Jeong,
  • Jaeik Lee,
  • In-Ki Min,
  • Jae-Seol Shim,
  • Do-Seong Byun,
  • Jinkwon Kim,
  • Jin-Yong Jeong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00601
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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The Yellow Sea is one of the most productive continental shelves in the world. This large marine ecosystem is experiencing an epochal change in water temperature, stratification, nutrients, and subsequently in ecological diversity. Research-oriented monitoring of these changes requires a sustainable, multi-disciplinary approach. For this purpose, the Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology (KIOST) constructed the Socheongcho Ocean Research Station (S-ORS), a steel-framed tower-type platform, in the central Yellow Sea about 50 km off the western coast of the Korean Peninsula. This station is equipped with about forty sensors for interdisciplinary oceanographic observations. Since its construction in 2014, this station has continuously conducted scientific observations and provided qualified time series: physical oceanographic variables such as temperature, salinity, sea level pressure, wave, and current; biogeochemical variables such as chlorophyll-a, photosynthetically active radiation, and total suspended particles; atmospheric variables including air temperature, wind, greenhouse gasses, and air particles including black carbon. A prime advantage is that this platform has provided stable facilities including a wet lab where scientists can stay and experiment on in situ water samples. Several studies are in process to understand and characterize the evolution of environmental signals, including air-sea interaction, marine ecosystems, wave detection, and total suspended particles in the central Yellow Sea. This paper provides an overview of the research facilities, maintenance, observations, scientific achievements, and next steps of the S-ORS with highlighting this station as an open lab for interdisciplinary collaboration on multiscale process studies.

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