Abstract

A new marine hazard of golden tides caused by floating brown macroalgae-Sargassum occurred in the Yellow Sea in December 2016. An economic loss of 0.5 billion CNY (about U.S. $73 million) was estimated due to the damaged seaweed aquaculture in the Jiangsu Shoal, China. In this letter, images from the new Chinese satellite of Gaofen (GF) with high-resolution optical cameras are used to retrieve the drifting path of floating Sargassum and its origin. A southward drifting path of floating Sargassum in the western Yellow Sea is identified for the first time, and the initial site of bloom occurrence is near the eastern end of the Shandong Peninsula, China, implying the origin of this hazard of floating Sargassum. The scale of this Sargassum bloom event in the Jiangsu Shoal is also evaluated using a linear-mixing model suitable for high-resolution images. The result shows that the total area of Sargassum-containing pixels in the GF-1 wide-field-of-view images on December 31, 2016 was more than 46 km2, and according to the estimation by the linear-mixing model, the total area of sea surface completely covered by Sargassum was above 8.8 km2. The approach and the results presented in this letter should contribute to the future study and management of golden tides in Chinese coastal waters.

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