2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2007.07.030
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Changes in the abundance and composition of picophytoplankton in relation to the occurrence of a Kyucho and a bottom intrusion in the Bungo Channel, Japan

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Since the temperature of the river water was higher than that of the lake water, these cells would be advected by the river inflow. The effect of the physical process on the composition of the picocyanobacterial community is well known for marine environments (Wood et al 1998;Liu et al 2004;Katano et al 2005aKatano et al , 2007Hirose et al 2008). Therefore, the physical process is also important when determining the distribution of PC-or PE-rich cells in Lake Baikal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Since the temperature of the river water was higher than that of the lake water, these cells would be advected by the river inflow. The effect of the physical process on the composition of the picocyanobacterial community is well known for marine environments (Wood et al 1998;Liu et al 2004;Katano et al 2005aKatano et al , 2007Hirose et al 2008). Therefore, the physical process is also important when determining the distribution of PC-or PE-rich cells in Lake Baikal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Jiao and Yanhui (2002) determined that Prochlorococcus in the high latitude China sea was distributed along the Kuroshio Current, which is the second largest warm‐water current in the world. Hirose and colleagues (2008) reported that the exogenous Prochlorococcus brought by warm currents could grow in the Bungo Channel. The results presented in that paper suggested that those Prochlorococcus that appear in temperate seas may be brought from oligotrophic tropical oceans by warm currents; however, our study area is located some distance away from the Kuroshio Current.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, it also provides us with an opportunity to monitor the nutrient and biological transitions induced by growing Kuroshio frontal waves because field measurements can be limited in space to within the narrow Bungo Channel of width about 50 km. In fact, kyucho induced transitions of phytoplankton biomass and/or species have been pointed out in Bungo Channel research [ Koizumi and Kohno , 1994; Katano et al , 2007; Hirose et al , 2008]. Hence, we are able to predetermine the location where nutrient and biological transitions may occur after the passage of growing frontal waves (i.e., kyucho).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 76%