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Temporal variation in mass fluxes and the major components of sinking particles in Sagami Bay, off Japan
Authors:Toshiyuki Masuzawa  Tie LiYun Duan  Mineko YamamotoYuriko Hibi  Takeshi NakatsukaHiroshi Kitazato  Yoshihisa Kato
Institution:a Nagoya University, Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Department of Hydrospheric-Atmospheric Science, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan
b Department of Hydrosperic-Atmospheric Science, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan
c Hydrospheric-Atmospheric Research Center, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan
d Low Temperature Research Institute, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0819, Japan
e Department of Life and Earth Sciences, Shizuoka University, Shizuoka 422-8529, Japan
f School of Marine Science and Technology, Tokai University, Shimizu 424-8610, Japan
Abstract:Sinking particles were collected using time-series sediment traps deployed at 350 and 20 mab at Site SB (34° 58.5’N, 139° 20.9’E, 1544 m depth) near the center of Sagami Bay, off Japan with high time resolutions of 5-8 days (March 1997 to August 1998) and 3-4.5 days (March 1998 to August 1998), respectively. The major components (CaCO3, OM, opal, and clay) of these sinking particles and surface bottom sediments were determined using a stepwise leaching method combined with gravimetry. Average total mass fluxes were 1480, 5560 and 3068 mg/m2/year at 350 mab, at 20 mab, and in the surface sediments, respectively, indicating an enhanced collection of sinking particles at 20 mab. Clay was the dominant component and biogenic components (opal+OM+CaCO3) were dominated mainly by opal and secondly by OM. On average, opal and CaCO3 contents decreased gradually as clay content increased with increasing depth from 350 mab-20 mab and in the surface sediments, indicating dissolution of opal and CaCO3 through sinking, rebound, resuspension or sedimentation processes. Thirteen total mass flux peaks at 17--40-day intervals were observed at 350 mab during the period from March 1997 to August 1998 except for winter, while eight peaks were observed at 20 mab for the period from March 1998 to August 1998. Two types of total mass peaks can be distinguished: one with a clear increase in biogenic flux (opal+OM+CaCO3) and little or no increase in clay flux and termed a bloom type (B-type), and the other with a clear increase in clay flux, little increase in biogenic flux and termed a resuspension type (R-type). Some R-type peaks, but not all, coincided with total mass flux peaks observed at the mouth of Tokyo Bay and suggested the possibility of the effect of particulate materials transported from Tokyo Bay to site SB. The enormously large peak observed at 20 mab in late May 1998 and that at 350 mab in early June 1998 were considered to be due to some physical perturbations from an earthquake swarm near site SB during the period from April to June 1998. The 17--40-day periodicity was associated clearly with the change in biogenic flux dominated by opal flux and is thought to reflect the periodicity of biological productivity dominated by diatoms in the euphotic zone of Sagami Bay.
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