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Anthropogenic eutrophication and stratification strength control hypoxia in the Yangtze estuary

Anthropogenic eutrophication and stratification strength control hypoxia in the Yangtze estuary
Anthropogenic eutrophication and stratification strength control hypoxia in the Yangtze estuary
Many large estuaries are threatened by intensifying hypoxia. However, due to the limited duration of available observations, uncertainties persist regarding the level of contemporary hypoxia intensity in a longer-term context and the relative contributions of climate versus human factors. Here we present sediment records for the hypoxia intensity and associated environmental parameters in the Yangtze Estuary over the past three centuries. The results show that the hypoxia intensity has been increasing during the last half century due to anthropogenic eutrophication, but the current hypoxia condition is not as severe as some preindustrial periods due to weaker stratification in the water column. Our
findings suggest that if anthropogenic and climatic forcing coincide in the foreseeable future, the hypoxia intensity of the Yangtze Estuary may reach unprecedented levels.
Sheng, Hui
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Darby, Stephen E.
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Zhao, Ning
ebe0ac3e-53bd-43fd-b633-1264307d3a04
Liu, Dongyan
7071188d-0920-4f6f-ad25-45e279b81ed5
Kettner, Albert J.
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Lu, Xixi
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Yang, Yang
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Gao, Jianhua
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Zhao, Yaqing
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Wang, Ya Ping
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Sheng, Hui
1e35d2f4-d3d8-4841-b98b-cfd9b48699ba
Darby, Stephen E.
4c3e1c76-d404-4ff3-86f8-84e42fbb7970
Zhao, Ning
ebe0ac3e-53bd-43fd-b633-1264307d3a04
Liu, Dongyan
7071188d-0920-4f6f-ad25-45e279b81ed5
Kettner, Albert J.
93fe4d32-6751-464e-b633-117fc8575125
Lu, Xixi
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Yang, Yang
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Gao, Jianhua
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Zhao, Yaqing
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Wang, Ya Ping
39390f0f-644b-417b-b4f1-68a077b92286

Sheng, Hui, Darby, Stephen E., Zhao, Ning, Liu, Dongyan, Kettner, Albert J., Lu, Xixi, Yang, Yang, Gao, Jianhua, Zhao, Yaqing and Wang, Ya Ping (2024) Anthropogenic eutrophication and stratification strength control hypoxia in the Yangtze estuary. Communications Earth & Environment, 5 (1), [235]. (doi:10.1038/s43247-024-01403-w).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Many large estuaries are threatened by intensifying hypoxia. However, due to the limited duration of available observations, uncertainties persist regarding the level of contemporary hypoxia intensity in a longer-term context and the relative contributions of climate versus human factors. Here we present sediment records for the hypoxia intensity and associated environmental parameters in the Yangtze Estuary over the past three centuries. The results show that the hypoxia intensity has been increasing during the last half century due to anthropogenic eutrophication, but the current hypoxia condition is not as severe as some preindustrial periods due to weaker stratification in the water column. Our
findings suggest that if anthropogenic and climatic forcing coincide in the foreseeable future, the hypoxia intensity of the Yangtze Estuary may reach unprecedented levels.

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s43247-024-01403-w - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 May 2024
Published date: 4 May 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489976
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489976
PURE UUID: 8b2473a1-6bc5-42a5-9345-5fc15bfe9a3a
ORCID for Stephen E. Darby: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8778-4394

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 09 May 2024 16:33
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:37

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Contributors

Author: Hui Sheng
Author: Ning Zhao
Author: Dongyan Liu
Author: Albert J. Kettner
Author: Xixi Lu
Author: Yang Yang
Author: Jianhua Gao
Author: Yaqing Zhao
Author: Ya Ping Wang

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