Frontiers in Marine Science (May 2022)

Response Process of Coastal Hypoxia to a Passing Typhoon in the East China Sea

  • Qicheng Meng,
  • Qicheng Meng,
  • Qicheng Meng,
  • Feng Zhou,
  • Feng Zhou,
  • Feng Zhou,
  • Xiao Ma,
  • Xiao Ma,
  • Jiliang Xuan,
  • Jiliang Xuan,
  • Jiliang Xuan,
  • Han Zhang,
  • Han Zhang,
  • Shuai Wang,
  • Xiaobo Ni,
  • Xiaobo Ni,
  • Wenyan Zhang,
  • Bin Wang,
  • Dewang Li,
  • Di Tian,
  • Di Tian,
  • Di Tian,
  • Jia Li,
  • Jia Li,
  • Jiangning Zeng,
  • Jiangning Zeng,
  • Jiangning Zeng,
  • Jiangning Zeng,
  • Jianfang Chen,
  • Jianfang Chen,
  • Jianfang Chen,
  • Jianfang Chen,
  • Daji Huang,
  • Daji Huang,
  • Daji Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2022.892797
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Details of the development of coastal hypoxia in response to the passage of Typhoon Bavi (2020) in the East China Sea were reconstructed by numerical modeling using a three-dimensional coupled physical–biogeochemical model. The model was validated via repeated surveys along a transect across a submerged river valley off the Changjiang Estuary before and after the passage of Typhoon Bavi. Before Bavi’s arrival, survey data indicated that the coastal hypoxia had formed off the Changjiang Estuary. However, the hypoxia was not eliminated but instead migrated and aggravated along the observed transect after the typhoon passage. This phenomenon cannot be attributed to the typhoon-induced mixing. Simulation results reveal that the observed development and spatial migration of hypoxia was mainly controlled by typhoon-induced oceanic advection. Results show that Bavi stimulated a regional quasi-barotropic cyclonic loop circulation and coastal downwelling reversing general summer circulation patterns. The onshore transport of the warmer shelf water and subsequent downwelling resulted in a warming of coastal water. The southward coastal current and downwelling induced by the typhoon also led to a migration of the hypoxic zone. Meanwhile, a massive transport of resuspended planktonic detritus from the steep inner shelf and the shallow Changjiang bank toward the submerged river valley occurred. This study reveals that the typhoon-driven currents can play an important role in the development of hypoxia and redistribution of deposited organic matter in coastal shelf seas, which may have both short- and long-term effects on the regional marine biogeochemical environment.

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