Abstract

Abstract. Multiple factors have been accused of triggering coastal hypoxia off the Changjiang Estuary, and their interactions lead to high yearly variation in hypoxia development time window and distribution extent. Two oceanographic cruises, conducted in July 2015 and August–September 2017, were complemented by river discharge, circulation simulation, remotely sensed wind, salinity and sea level anomaly data to study the dissolved oxygen (DO) depletion off the Changjiang Estuary from synoptic to interannual timescales. Intensification of the Chinese Coastal Current and Changjiang Diluted Water (CDW) spreading to the south together with coastal downwelling caused by the northerly wind was observed in the summer of 2015. This physical forcing led to a well-ventilated area in the north and a hypoxic area of 1.3×104 km2 in the south, while in 2017 the summer monsoon (southerly winds) induced offshore transport in the surface layer that caused a subsurface intrusion of Kuroshio-derived water to the shallower areas (<10 m depth) in the north and upwelling in the south. Wind-driven Ekman surface flow and reversal of the geostrophic current related to the upwelling compelled alteration of the Chinese Coastal Current. Consequently, intense hypoxia (DO down to 0.6 mg L−1) starting from 4 to 8 m depth connected to CDW and deep water intrusion in the north and coastal hypoxia linked to the upwelling in the south were observed in 2017. Distinct situations of stratification and DO distributions can be explained by wind forcing and concurrent features in surface and deep layer circulation, upwelling and downwelling events. Enhanced primary production in the upper layer of the CDW or the upwelled water determines the location and extent of DO depletion. Likewise, the pycnocline created by Kuroshio subsurface water intrusion is an essential precondition for hypoxia formation. Wind forcing largely controls the interannual change of hypoxic area location and extent. If the summer monsoon prevails, extensive hypoxia more likely occurs in the north. Hypoxia in the south occurs if the summer monsoon is considerably weaker than the long-term mean.

Highlights

  • Dead zones in the coastal ocean have spread since the 1960s (Diaz and Rosenberg, 2008)

  • The southward-spreading Changjiang Diluted Water (CDW) was indicated to prevail before the survey in 2015, but the eastern and northeastern diversion of CDW was prevalent before the survey in 2017

  • Two main conditions in the water column must be present for the occurrence of hypoxia in the near-bottom layer off the Changjiang Estuary: enhanced primary production in the upper layer and KSSW intrusion in the near-bottom layer

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Summary

Introduction

Dead zones in the coastal ocean have spread since the 1960s (Diaz and Rosenberg, 2008). Besides eutrophication (Diaz and Rosenberg, 2008), climate change (Altieri and Gedan, 2015) intensifies dissolved oxygen (DO) depletion. Hypoxia is a condition of low DO, which cannot be sustained by marine life. Hypoxia can have various definitions (Vaquer-Sunyer and Duarte, 2008). Natural and anthropogenic nutrient load in these areas leads to intensive sedimentation of organic matter. The deep layer below the euphotic zone can receive DO by physical processes only – lateral advection and vertical mix-

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