Environment International (Aug 2023)
Spatio-temporal structures of satellite-derived water quality indicators along the Korean South Coast
Abstract
The structure of 9-year time series data for Sea Surface Temperature (SST), Chlorophyll a (Chl-a) and Total Suspended Solids (TSS), derived from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS), was examined in this study. Authors found that there exists strong seasonality among the three variables with spatial heterogeneity along the Korean South Coast (KSC). In specific, SST was in phase with Chl-a, but out of phase with TSS by six months. A strong inversed spectral power with six-month phase-lag was found between Chl-a and TSS. This could be attributed to different dynamics and environmental settings. For example, Chl-a concentration seemed to have strong positive correlation with SST indicating typical seasonality of marine biogeochemical processes such as primary production; while a strong negative correlation between TSS and SST might have been influenced by changes in physical oceanographic processes, such as stratification and monsoonal wind-driven vertical mixing. In addition, the strong east–west heterogeneity of Chl-a suggests that the marine coastal environments are predominantly governed by distinct local hydrological conditions and human activities associated with land cover and land use, while the east–west spatial pattern revealed in TSS timeseries was associated with the gradient of tidal forcings and topographical changes keeping tidally induced resuspension low eastward.