TY - JOUR
T1 - Temporal and spatial flux changes of radiolarians in the northwestern Pacific Ocean during 1997-2000
AU - Okazaki, Yusuke
AU - Takahashi, Kozo
AU - Onodera, Jonaotaro
AU - Honda, Makio C.
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to the captain, crew, technicians, and scientists on board the R.V. Mirai Cruises, JAMSTEC, for their efforts in collecting the sediment trap samples. We acknowledge the technicians of Marine Works Japan Co., Ltd. for their help with laboratory works. We thank Daisuke Matsueda of Kyushu University for providing the valuable information about the phaeodarian fluxes in the Bering Sea and subarctic Pacific. This manuscript was significantly improved following the constructive comments provided by editor: Dr. Demetrio Boltovskoy and two referees: Dr. Stanley A. Kling and Prof. Kjell R. Bjørklund. We thank Dr. Richard W. Jordan of Yamagata University for English editing of the manuscript. This study was funded by the following research programs of MEXT: Grants-in-Aid-for Scientific Research B2 Project No. 10480128, B1 Project No. 13440152 and the GCMAPS program (H. Kawahata, PI). YO received a partial fund from the Prof. Tatsuro Matsumoto Scholarship Fund.
PY - 2005/8
Y1 - 2005/8
N2 - In order to examine the radiolarian fluxes and evaluate their relationship to the physical and biological environments, time-series sediment traps were deployed at three stations (Stations 50N, KNOT, and 40N) in the northwestern North Pacific from 1997 to 2000. Station 50N (50°N, 165°E, 3260 m) is located in the center of Western Subarctic Gyre (WSAG); Station KNOT (44°N, 155°E, 2957 m) is located toward the margin of WSAG; and Station 40N (40°N, 165°E, 2986 m) is located in the Subarctic Boundary. Total radiolaria fluxes at Station 40N showed higher values than those at the other two stations, and were mainly attributed to the influence of relatively high-temperature and high-salinity subtropical gyre waters. Correlation coefficients between total mass fluxes (mainly composed of diatoms) and radiolarian fluxes at three stations were relatively low. This is primarily because of the wide vertical distribution of radiolarians and various trophic patterns corresponding to their niche. Radiolarian species were classified according to their geographic water mass and vertical distributions based on previous studies using sediment samples. As a result, seasonal changes of radiolarian fluxes in each water mass showed patterns corresponding to particular controlling factors such as physical hydrography and food conditions. Among these patterns, temporal changes in radiolarian taxonomic composition in the upper layer (0-100 m) seemed to reflect well the sea-surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) changes, affected by El Niño and La Niña events, at Station 40N. Therefore, radiolarian assemblages can be used to reconstruct past SSTA changes and to understand the past El Niño and La Niña teleconnection in the Kuroshio-Oyashio Extension region.
AB - In order to examine the radiolarian fluxes and evaluate their relationship to the physical and biological environments, time-series sediment traps were deployed at three stations (Stations 50N, KNOT, and 40N) in the northwestern North Pacific from 1997 to 2000. Station 50N (50°N, 165°E, 3260 m) is located in the center of Western Subarctic Gyre (WSAG); Station KNOT (44°N, 155°E, 2957 m) is located toward the margin of WSAG; and Station 40N (40°N, 165°E, 2986 m) is located in the Subarctic Boundary. Total radiolaria fluxes at Station 40N showed higher values than those at the other two stations, and were mainly attributed to the influence of relatively high-temperature and high-salinity subtropical gyre waters. Correlation coefficients between total mass fluxes (mainly composed of diatoms) and radiolarian fluxes at three stations were relatively low. This is primarily because of the wide vertical distribution of radiolarians and various trophic patterns corresponding to their niche. Radiolarian species were classified according to their geographic water mass and vertical distributions based on previous studies using sediment samples. As a result, seasonal changes of radiolarian fluxes in each water mass showed patterns corresponding to particular controlling factors such as physical hydrography and food conditions. Among these patterns, temporal changes in radiolarian taxonomic composition in the upper layer (0-100 m) seemed to reflect well the sea-surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) changes, affected by El Niño and La Niña events, at Station 40N. Therefore, radiolarian assemblages can be used to reconstruct past SSTA changes and to understand the past El Niño and La Niña teleconnection in the Kuroshio-Oyashio Extension region.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.dsr2.2005.07.006
DO - 10.1016/j.dsr2.2005.07.006
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33644500131
SN - 0967-0645
VL - 52
SP - 2240
EP - 2274
JO - Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography
JF - Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography
IS - 16-18
ER -