scholarly journals ΔR Correction Values for the Northern Indian Ocean

Radiocarbon ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 43 (2A) ◽  
pp. 483-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koushik Dutta ◽  
Ravi Bhushan ◽  
B L K Somayajulu

Apparent marine radiocarbon ages are reported for the northern Indian Ocean region for the pre-nuclear period, based on measurements made in seven mollusk shells collected between 1930 and 1954. The conventional 14C ages of these shells range from 693 ± 44 to 434 ± 51 BP in the Arabian Sea and 511 ± 34 to 408 ± 51 BP in the Bay of Bengal. These ages correspond to mean ΔR correction values of 163 ± 30 yr for the northern Arabian Sea, 11 ± 35 yr for the eastern Bay of Bengal (Andaman Sea) and 32 ± 20 yr for the southern Bay of Bengal. Contrasting reservoir ages for these two basins are most likely due to differences in their thermocline ventilation rates.

Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4890 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-147
Author(s):  
K.V. AKHILESH ◽  
T.G. KISHORE ◽  
M. MUKTHA ◽  
M.W. LISHER ◽  
GOP P. AMBARISH ◽  
...  

Pseudanthias vizagensis Krishna, Rao and Venu, 2017 was described from 44 specimens, collected from Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh), on the Bay of Bengal coast of India, but without clear designation of a holotype. The characters used for differentiating the species from its nearest congener Pseudanthias pillai Heemstra & Akhilesh, 2012, a species currently known only from the northern Indian Ocean, were limited, poor and substantially overlapping. Examination of additional material of P. pillai from the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal, Andaman Sea, and comparison with the original description and images of P. vizagensis revealed that the latter is a junior synonym of P. pillai. Diagnostic characters are reviewed, additional morphological details and fresh colouration, including sexual dimorphic characters not covered in previous works are provided. 


2007 ◽  
Vol 20 (13) ◽  
pp. 2978-2993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tommy G. Jensen

Abstract Composites of Florida State University winds (1970–99) for four different climate scenarios are used to force an Indian Ocean model. In addition to the mean climatology, the cases include La Niña, El Niño, and the Indian Ocean dipole (IOD). The differences in upper-ocean water mass exchanges between the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal are investigated and show that, during El Niño and IOD years, the average clockwise Indian Ocean circulation is intensified, while it is weakened during La Niña years. As a consequence, high-salinity water export from the Arabian Sea into the Bay of Bengal is enhanced during El Niño and IOD years, while transport of low-salinity waters from the Bay of Bengal into the Arabian Sea is enhanced during La Niña years. This provides a venue for interannual salinity variations in the northern Indian Ocean.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (23) ◽  
pp. 6051-6080
Author(s):  
Tim Rixen ◽  
Greg Cowie ◽  
Birgit Gaye ◽  
Joaquim Goes ◽  
Helga do Rosário Gomes ◽  
...  

Abstract. Decreasing concentrations of dissolved oxygen in the ocean are considered one of the main threats to marine ecosystems as they jeopardize the growth of higher organisms. They also alter the marine nitrogen cycle, which is strongly bound to the carbon cycle and climate. While higher organisms in general start to suffer from oxygen concentrations < ∼ 63 µM (hypoxia), the marine nitrogen cycle responds to oxygen concentration below a threshold of about 20 µM (microbial hypoxia), whereas anoxic processes dominate the nitrogen cycle at oxygen concentrations of < ∼ 0.05 µM (functional anoxia). The Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal are home to approximately 21 % of the total volume of ocean waters revealing microbial hypoxia. While in the Arabian Sea this oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) is also functionally anoxic, the Bay of Bengal OMZ seems to be on the verge of becoming so. Even though there are a few isolated reports on the occurrence of anoxia prior to 1960, anoxic events have so far not been reported from the open northern Indian Ocean (i.e., other than on shelves) during the last 60 years. Maintenance of functional anoxia in the Arabian Sea OMZ with oxygen concentrations ranging between > 0 and ∼ 0.05 µM is highly extraordinary considering that the monsoon reverses the surface ocean circulation twice a year and turns vast areas of the Arabian Sea from an oligotrophic oceanic desert into one of the most productive regions of the oceans within a few weeks. Thus, the comparably low variability of oxygen concentration in the OMZ implies stable balances between the physical oxygen supply and the biological oxygen consumption, which includes negative feedback mechanisms such as reducing oxygen consumption at decreasing oxygen concentrations (e.g., reduced respiration). Lower biological oxygen consumption is also assumed to be responsible for a less intense OMZ in the Bay of Bengal. According to numerical model results, a decreasing physical oxygen supply via the inflow of water masses from the south intensified the Arabian Sea OMZ during the last 6000 years, whereas a reduced oxygen supply via the inflow of Persian Gulf Water from the north intensifies the OMZ today in response to global warming. The first is supported by data derived from the sedimentary records, and the latter concurs with observations of decreasing oxygen concentrations and a spreading of functional anoxia during the last decades in the Arabian Sea. In the Arabian Sea decreasing oxygen concentrations seem to have initiated a regime shift within the pelagic ecosystem structure, and this trend is also seen in benthic ecosystems. Consequences for biogeochemical cycles are as yet unknown, which, in addition to the poor representation of mesoscale features in global Earth system models, reduces the reliability of estimates of the future OMZ development in the northern Indian Ocean.


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4576 (2) ◽  
pp. 257
Author(s):  
PETER R. LAST ◽  
BERNARD SÉRET ◽  
GAVIN J.P. NAYLOR

A new species of guitarfish, Rhinobatos ranongensis sp. nov., is described from 5 preserved specimens, and images and tissue samples of additional material, collected from the Andaman Sea and Bay of Bengal. This species co-occurs in the eastern sector of the northern Indian Ocean with two poorly defined congeners, R. annandalei Norman and R. lionotus Norman, which have been misidentified and confused with Indo-Pacific congeners since they were first described in 1926. Norman’s species are rediagnosed based on limited new material and a re-examination of the types. In the western sector of the northern Indian Ocean, Rhinobatos annandalei has been confused in recent literature with the sympatric R. punctifer Compagno and Randall, which is represented by four primary colour morphs, including a white-spotted colour morph resembling R. annandalei. Rhinobatos punctifer also displays strong intraspecific variability and sexual dimorphism in some body dimensions. These four species of Rhinobatos have unique MtDna sequences and belong to a clade of Indo-West Pacific species that are morphologically similar. Despite the relatively small numbers of specimens available for investigation, these species exhibit some clear differences in body proportions, meristics and squamation. Rhinobatos ranongensis sp. nov. differs from its northern Indian Ocean congeners through a combination of a relatively narrow disc and mouth, high vertebral count, long snout, low dorsal fins, and being largely plain coloured. A new lectotype and a paralectotype are designated for the syntypes of R. annandalei, and the four primary colour forms of R. punctifer, the plain, white-spotted and ocellated morphs, are described and the three nominal species rediagnosed. A key is provided to the four known members of the genus in the northern Indian Ocean. 


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jovitha Lincy ◽  
Cathrine Manohar

Abstract. The Northern Indian Ocean host two recognized Oxygen Minimum Zones (OMZ): one in the Arabian Sea and the other in the Bay of Bengal region. The next-generation sequencing technique was used to understand the total bacterial diversity from the surface sediment of off Goa within the OMZ of Arabian Sea, and from off Paradip within the OMZ of Bay of Bengal. The dominant phyla identified include Firmicutes (33.06 %) and Proteobacteria (32.44 %) from the Arabian Sea, and Proteobacteria (52.51 %) and Planctomycetes (8.63 %) from the Bay of Bengal. Statistical analysis indicates that bacterial diversity from sediments of the Bay of Bengal OMZ is ~ 48 % higher than the Arabian Sea OMZ. Diverse candidate bacterial clades were also detected, whose function is unknown, but many of these were reported from other OMZs as well, suggesting their putative role in sediment biogeochemistry. Bacterial diversity from the present study reveals that the off Paradip site of Bay of Bengal OMZ is highly diverse and unexplored in comparison to the off Goa site of the Arabian Sea OMZ. Functional diversity analysis indicates that the relative percentage distribution of genes involved in methane, nitrogen, sulfur and many unclassified energy metabolisms is almost the same in both sites, reflecting a similar ecological role, irrespective of the differences in phylotypic diversity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 505-519 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moturi S. Krishna ◽  
Rongali Viswanadham ◽  
Mamidala H. K. Prasad ◽  
Vuravakonda R. Kumari ◽  
Vedula V. S. S. Sarma

Abstract. Rivers are an important source of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) to the adjacent coastal waters. In order to examine the spatial variability in the distribution and major sources of DIC in the Indian monsoonal rivers and to quantify their export flux to the northern Indian Ocean, 27 major and medium-sized rivers were sampled during the discharge period. Significant spatial variability in concentrations of DIC (3.4–73.6 mg L−1) was observed, and it is attributed to spatial variations in the precipitation pattern, the size of rivers, pollution and lithology of the catchments. The stable isotopic composition of DIC (δ13CDIC) also showed strong spatial variability (−13.0 ‰ to −1.4 ‰) in the Indian monsoonal rivers with relatively depleted δ13CDIC values in rivers of the northwest of India (-11.1±2.3 ‰) and enriched values in the southeast of India (-3.5±2.3 ‰). Results of the linear least-squares regression models of Keeling and Miller–Tan's plots indicated that the chemical weathering of carbonate and silicate minerals by soil CO2 is the major source of DIC in the Indian monsoonal rivers. Spatial variability in the deviation of δ13CDIC from the approximated δ13C of the source may probably be due to dominant autotrophic production in rivers of the southeastern region, whereas heterotrophic decomposition of organic matter largely influences the other Indian monsoonal rivers. It is estimated that the Indian monsoonal rivers annually export ∼10.3 Tg of DIC to the northern Indian Ocean, of which the major fraction (75 %) enters into the Bay of Bengal, and the remaining fraction reaches to the Arabian Sea. This is consistent with the freshwater flux, which is 3 times higher for the Bay of Bengal (∼378 km3 yr−1) than for the Arabian Sea (122 km3 yr−1). Despite discharge from the Indian monsoonal rivers accounting for only 1.3 % of the global freshwater discharge, they disproportionately export 2.5 % of the total DIC exported by the world's major rivers. Despite rivers from the region in the southwest (SW) of India exporting DIC that is an order of magnitude lower (0.3 Tg yr−1) than the rivers from other regions of India, the highest yield of DIC was found in the rivers of the SW region of India. It is attributed to intense precipitation (∼3000 mm), favorable natural vegetation of tropical moist deciduous and tropical wet evergreen and semi-evergreen forests, tropical wet climate, high soil organic carbon, and the dominance of red loamy soils in catchments of the rivers of the SW region.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Rixen ◽  
Greg Cowie ◽  
Birgit Gaye ◽  
Joaquim Goes ◽  
Helga do Rosário Gomes ◽  
...  

Abstract. Decreasing concentrations of dissolved oxygen and the resulting expansion of anaerobic ecosystems is a major threat to marine ecosystem services because it favors the formation of greenhouse gases such as methane, endangers the growth of economically important species, and increases the loss nitrate. Nitrate is one of the potential primary nutrients, which availability controls the marine productivity. The Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal are home to ~ 59 % of the Earth's marine sediments exposed to severe oxygen depletion and approximately 21 % of the total volume of oxygen-depleted waters (oxygen minimum zones, OMZs). The balance between physical oxygen supply and the biological oxygen consumption controlled the oxygen concentrations. In the Arabian Sea and most likely also in the Bay of Bengal the supply of oxygen sustained by mixing and advection associated with mesoscale eddies compensated the biological oxygen consumption. These steady states maintain low (hypoxic) oxygen concentrations allowing the competition between anaerobic and aerobic processes. However, due to slightly higher oxygen concentrations, the aerobic nitrite oxidization inhibits the anaerobic nitrite reduction and thus denitrification (the reduction of nitrate to N2) to become significant in the Bay of Bengal. A feedback mechanism caused by the negative influence of decreasing oxygen concentrations on the biological oxygen demand helped to maintain these steady states. Furthermore, it might have also counteracted a reduced physical oxygen supply into the Arabian Sea caused by climate-driven changes in the ocean's circulation during the last 6000 years. However, due to human-induced global changes, the OMZs in Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal intensified and expanded, which included also the occurrence of anoxic events on the Indian shelf. This affects benthic ecosystems, and in the Arabian Sea it seems to have initiated a regime shift within the pelagic ecosystem structure. Consequences for biogeochemical cycles are unknown, which, in addition to the poor representation of mesoscale features reduces the reliability of predictions of the future OMZ development in the northern Indian Ocean.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moturi S. Krishna ◽  
Rongali Viswanadham ◽  
Mamidala H. K. Prasad ◽  
Vuravakonda R. Kumari ◽  
Vedula V. S. S. Sarma

Abstract. Rivers are strong source of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) to the adjacent coastal waters. In order to identify the major sources of DIC in the Indian monsoonal estuaries and their export flux to the north Indian Ocean, 27 major and medium estuaries along the Indian coast were sampled during discharge period. An order of magnitude variability in DIC concentrations was found within the Indian estuaries sampled (3.4–44.1 mg l−1) due to significant variability in the size of rivers, precipitation pattern and lithology in the catchments. Dilution with high precipitation (2500 ± 500 mm) and exchange with ground waters of low DIC resulted in very low concentrations of DIC in estuaries located in the southwest of India (6.6 ± 2.1 mg l−1) than the estuaries located in the southeast (36.3 ± 6.3 mg l−1), northwest (30.3 ± 8.9 mg l−1) and northeast (19.5 ± 6.2 mg l−1) regions of India. Though the range of stable carbon isotopes of DIC (δ13CDIC) indicates that DIC is largely contributed by weathering of silicate and carbonate minerals, however, the storage of water in dams/reservoirs and intrusion of marine waters caused the enrichment in stable carbon isotopic composition of DIC (δ13CDIC). It is estimated that the Indian monsoonal estuaries annually export ~10.4 Tg (1 Tg = 1012 g) of DIC to the northern Indian Ocean, of which the major fraction (74.2 %) enters into the Bay of Bengal and the remaining reaches to the Arabian Sea. It is mainly due to the fact that the Bay of Bengal receives ~378 km3 yr−1 of freshwater from the catchment area of about 0.96 million km−2, whereas the Arabian Sea receives only 122 km3 yr−1 of freshwater from the catchment area of only 0.23 million km2. Though the discharge from the Indian monsoonal rivers account for only 1.3 % of global freshwater discharge, they disproportionately export 2.5 % of the total DIC export by the world major rivers and 9.4 % of the Asian rivers to oceans. The yield of DIC was found to be higher in the SW estuaries (10.8 ± 6.6 g m−2 yr−1) than the other estuaries though they export only 0.3 Tg yr−1 of DIC, which is more than an order of magnitude lower than the export by the NE (4.2 Tg yr−1) and SE estuaries (3.5 Tg yr−1), due to intense precipitation, favorable natural vegetation and tropical wet climate, high soil organic carbon and dominance of red loamy soils in catchments of the SW rivers. This study, therefore, reveals that significant variability in the lithology and hydrological and environmental conditions over the catchments strongly controls the concentrations and yield of DIC from the Indian monsoonal estuaries.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. K. Sarangi

A relationship between sea surface temperature (SST) and surface nitrate concentrations has been obtained for the first time based on in situ datasets retrieved from U.S. JGOFS (1991–96) and Indian cruises (2000–2006) in the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal and Indian Ocean region around the southern Indian tip. The dataset includes 1537 points. A sigmoid relationship obtained with value 0.912. NOAA-AVHRR pathfinder satellite monthly averaged SST data retrieved from the PODAAC/JPL/NASA archive during July 1999–June 2004. The datasets imported in the ERDAS-Imagine software and SST images generated on monthly and seasonal scales, for latitudes 5–12°N and longitudes 75–85°E. The ocean surface nitrate images retrieved based on the established sigmoid relationship with SST. The nitrate concentrations ranged between 0.01–3.0 μM and categorized into five ranges. The significant seasonal upwelling zone around the southwest coast of India (Kerala coast, Latitude 80.10–9.30°N and Longitude 75.60–76.20°E) was identified during July–September 1999–2004 with very high nitrate concentration (~1.00 μM). Low nitrate and nitrate-depleted zones observed during summer (March–May). In the Arabian Sea and northern Indian Ocean, high nitrate concentration (~0.50 μM) observed during the southwest monsoon (SWM), whereas the Bay of Bengal was marked with high nitrate (~0.50 μM) during the northeast monsoon (NEM). SST was high (~29°C) in the Bay of Bengal and low (~26°C) in the Arabian Sea and northern Indian Ocean during SWM and vice versa during the NEM. There is a clear inverse relationship between nitrate and SST in the study area during July 1999–June 2004.


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