Abstract

Chlorophyll-a is the predominant phytoplankton pigment responsible for determining primary productivity. In the present study, we used satellite-based data of chlorophyll-a, surface wind, and precipitation from 2003 to 2019 to investigate the variability of chlorophyll-a in the northern Maluku Sea and the Sulu Sill and examine its generating mechanism. We found that the chlorophyll-a bloom in the northern Maluku Sea occurs during the southeast monsoon season, while in the Sulu Sill, the chlorophyll-a concentration is higher than that in the northern Maluku Sea and occurs throughout the year. In the northern Maluku Sea, the chlorophyll-a bloom is generated by coastal upwelling. The maximum southerly wind during the southeast monsoon generates the strongest offshore Ekman Mass Transport (EMT) in the northern Maluku Sea triggering coastal upwelling. However, the power spectra analysis of satellite-derived chlorophyll-a shows strong peaks and amplitudes at both fortnightly (MSf) and monthly (Mm) frequencies, indicating that tidal mixing is an important generating mechanism for chlorophyll-a blooms in the Sulu Sill. Shallow bathymetry in the Sulu Sill may aid tidal mixing in effectively transporting nutrients from the near bottom to the sea surface, increasing chlorophyll-a concentration.

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