Abstract

AbstractBiological carbon pump (BCP) inefficiency was first observed in the South China Sea (SCS) throughout the 1997–1999 El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event, but the BCP usually recovers its efficiency when the climate conditions change from El Niño to La Niña conditions in the Pacific Ocean. Enhanced stratification and Kuroshio intrusion led to weak mixing and oligotrophic conditions in the sunlit layer of the SCS during the 1997/1998 El Niño phase, but the particulate organic carbon (POC) flux was comparable to the climatological mean due to the ballast effect of increased lithogenic material and CaCO3 flux. The deepened thermocline rendered the recovered mixing less effective in replenishing subsurface nutrients and subsequently lowered POC flux during the 1998/1999 La Niña phase. Both scenarios were characterized by decreased siliceous plankton but a stimulated calcareous plankton contribution, which reduced BCP efficiency, resulting in a unique asymmetric response to the ENSO in the SCS.

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