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New Evidence for Enhanced Ocean Primary Production Triggered by Tropical Cyclone

  • I. Lin
  • , W. Timothy Liu
  • , Chun-Chieh Wu
  • , George T. F. Wong
  • , Chuanmin Hu
  • , Zhiqiang Chen
  • , Wen-Der Liang
  • , Yih Yang
  • , Kon-Kee Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

New evidence based on recent satellite data is presented to provide a rare opportunity in quantifying the long-speculated contribution of tropical cyclones to enhance ocean primary production. In July 2000, moderate cyclone Kai-Tak passed over the South China Sea (SCS). During its short 3-day stay, Kai-Tak triggered an average 30-fold increase in surface chlorophyll-a concentration. The estimated carbon fixation resulting from this event alone is 0.8 Mt, or 2–4% of SCS's annual new production. Given an average of 14 cyclones passing over the SCS annually, we suggest the long-neglected contribution of tropical cyclones to SCS's annual new production may be as much as 20–30%.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalGeophysical Research Letters
Volume30
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1 2003

Disciplines

  • Life Sciences

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