Abstract

High resolution planktic foraminifer fauna assemblage data are used to reconstruct the millennial-scale sea surface temperature (SST) variability of the past 40000 years at an IMAGES core site (MD012404) in the Okinawa Trough in the East China Sea (ECS). The fauna assemblages in core MD012404 are dominated by five species Globigerinoides ruber, Globigerina bulloides, Neogloboquadrina dutertrei, Pulleniatina obliquiloculata, and Globigerinita glutinata, which account for > 70% in relative abundance. Our Q-mode factor analysis decomposed the fauna abundance data into three factors, which indicate cold water mass, warm water mass, and possibly coastal water flow with low salinity in the ECS. The MD012404 fauna data show abrupt changes at ~16 kya, suggesting a return to a warmer climate or warm water intrusion of the Kuroshio into the Okinawa Trough since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). SST estimates based on the fauna assemblages of planktic foraminifers indicate a LGM cooling of 1 - 2C. A maximum cooling by 3 - 4C is observed in episodic, millennial-scale events in the glacial stages of the record. The SST record displays variability that closely tracks the structure of oxygen isotopes of stalagmites from Hulu Cave and ice cores from GISP 2 Dansgaard/Oeschger cycles and Heinrich events. Low salinity in the ECS is inferred based on MD012404 fauna SST and planktic foraminifer oxygen isotope records for the cold millennial-scale intervals, pointing to the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and/or East Asian monsoon as important factors driving SST and salinity in the subtropical western Pacific, both on orbital and suborbital time scales.

Highlights

  • The East China Sea (ECS) is one of the marginal seas of the western Pacific, located between the Japan Sea and the South China Sea and connected to Asia with wide continental shelves

  • We found a similar trend of gradual increase in the mass accumulation rate (MAR) of warm planktic foraminifer species that include G. ruber, G. glutinata, and P. obliquiloculata since ~16 kya (Fig 3b)

  • We have presented high resolution planktic foraminifer fauna assemblage data and sea surface temperature (SST) records from a high sedimentation rate IMAGES core retrieved from the Okinawa Trough in the ECS

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Summary

Introduction

The East China Sea (ECS) is one of the marginal seas of the western Pacific, located between the Japan Sea and the South China Sea and connected to Asia with wide continental shelves. The Okinawa Trough is a back-arc spreading basin in the southeastern part of the ECS. The surface hydrography in the ECS near the Okinawa Trough is governed by the Kuroshio, a main western boundary current in the northwestern Pacific. The Kuroshio is responsible for great heat and moisture transport from the tropics to the middle latitudes (Hsueh 2000; Ichikawa and Chaen 2000). The mean seasonal range of surface heat transports in the Okinawa Trough is ~300 E m-2(Qiu et al 2004)

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