TY - JOUR
T1 - Diverse nature of the seasonally coastal eutrophication dominated by oceanic nutrients
T2 - An eco-system based analysis characterized by salmon migration and aquaculture
AU - Zhang, Jing
AU - Tishchenko, Pavel Ya
AU - Jiang, Zeng Jie
AU - Semkin, Pavel Yu
AU - Tishchenko, Petr P.
AU - Zheng, Wei
AU - Lobanov, Vyacheslav B.
AU - Sergeev, Alexander F.
AU - Jiang, Shan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - Previously, studies of coastal eutrophication have usually focused on the nutrients input from adjacent land sectors, such as rivers, submarine-ground discharges, and atmospheric depositions. Here we report two examples of well-managed seasonal eutrophication phenomena in coastal marine environments, where nutrients come predominantly from offshore: one by humans and the other by nature (higher trophic animals). In the Sanggou Bay of North China, the total amount of incoming nutrients from the open Yellow Sea is taken up by seaweeds. Seaweed, in turn, supports bivalves culture activities and absorbs nutrients emitted by finfish. In the Academy Bay of Russian Far East, a relatively high plankton primary production sustains throughout the salmon-returning season when nutrients are released from the massive carcasses of dead fish after return from the ocean to their natal streams to spawn and die. This high plankton productivity, in turn, fuels higher trophic ecosystem constituents, including whale populations of global importance. In the future, dominance of nutrients from marine sources needs to be seriously considered in studies of coastal eutrophication.
AB - Previously, studies of coastal eutrophication have usually focused on the nutrients input from adjacent land sectors, such as rivers, submarine-ground discharges, and atmospheric depositions. Here we report two examples of well-managed seasonal eutrophication phenomena in coastal marine environments, where nutrients come predominantly from offshore: one by humans and the other by nature (higher trophic animals). In the Sanggou Bay of North China, the total amount of incoming nutrients from the open Yellow Sea is taken up by seaweeds. Seaweed, in turn, supports bivalves culture activities and absorbs nutrients emitted by finfish. In the Academy Bay of Russian Far East, a relatively high plankton primary production sustains throughout the salmon-returning season when nutrients are released from the massive carcasses of dead fish after return from the ocean to their natal streams to spawn and die. This high plankton productivity, in turn, fuels higher trophic ecosystem constituents, including whale populations of global importance. In the future, dominance of nutrients from marine sources needs to be seriously considered in studies of coastal eutrophication.
KW - Academy Bay
KW - Aquaculture of seaweeds
KW - Eutrophication
KW - Salmon migration
KW - Sanggou Bay
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85161631396
U2 - 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2023.115150
DO - 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2023.115150
M3 - 文章
C2 - 37321000
AN - SCOPUS:85161631396
SN - 0025-326X
VL - 193
JO - Marine Pollution Bulletin
JF - Marine Pollution Bulletin
M1 - 115150
ER -