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Nutrient biogeochemistry of the eastern Arabian Sea during the southwest monsoon retreat
| Content Provider | CSIR - National Institute of Oceanography (NIO) |
|---|---|
| Author | George, R. Muraleedharan, K. R. Martin, G. D. Sabu, P. Gerson, V. J. Dineshkumar, P. K. Nair, S. M. Chandramohanakumar, N. Nair, K. K. C. |
| Abstract | Hydrography of the eastern Arabian Sea and associated chemical and biological responses were studied during the withdrawal phase of summer monsoon 2003. The shelf region off the southwest coast of India (10 degrees N-15 degrees N) continued to exhibit upwelling of colder (less than 28.5 degrees C), nutrient rich (nitrate greater than 2.0 mu M, phosphate greater than 0.8 mu M, silicate greater than 4.0 mu M) and relatively low oxygenated waters (approx. 180 mu M). The vertical advection of nutrients, coupled with anthropogenic terrestrial inputs, enhanced the levels of chlorophyll and primary productivity near the coastal margin off Cochin. The influence of both natural and anthropogenic nutrient loadings on the coastal system of the western continental shelf of India leads to eutrophication and hypoxia with negative impacts on the environment in general and fisheries in particular. |
| Starting Page | 703 |
| Ending Page | 718 |
| Page Count | 16 |
| File Format | |
| Journal | Environmental Earth Sciences |
| Volume Number | 68 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Springer |
| Access Restriction | Authorized |
| Subject Keyword | Nutrients (mineral) Chlorophylls Primary production Upwelling |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |