Advances in Earth Science ›› 2016, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (3): 277-285. doi: 10.11867/j.issn.1001-8166.2016.03.0277.

Special Issue: IODP

• Orginal Article • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Tropical Marine Productivity:The Modern Progress and Paleoproductivity Records

Hongrui Zhang( ), Chuanlian Liu( ), Dan Liang   

  1. Ocean and Earth Sciences School, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092,China
  • Received:2016-01-25 Revised:2016-02-25 Online:2016-03-20 Published:2016-03-10
  • About author:

    First author:Zhang Hongrui(1992-), male, Panjin City, Liaoning Province, PhD candidate. Research area include paleoceanography.E-mail:103443_rui@tongji.edu.cn

    Corresponding author:Liu Chuanlian (1963-), male, Jining City,Shandong Province, Professor. Research areas include marine micropaleontology and paleoceanography.E-mail:liucl@tongji.edu.cn

  • Supported by:
    Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China “From indoor culturing to geological records: Exploring the role of coccolithophores in the carbon cycle of the South China Sea” (No.91228204) and “Modern coccolithophores in the Yellow Sea and the East China Sea and their response to environment” (No.41376047)

Hongrui Zhang, Chuanlian Liu, Dan Liang. Tropical Marine Productivity:The Modern Progress and Paleoproductivity Records[J]. Advances in Earth Science, 2016, 31(3): 277-285.

The classification and influencing factors of modern marine productivity were reviewed at the beginning. We discussed the pros and cons of different paleoproductivity proxies. Based on these discussions, we collected paleoproductivity reconstructions in tropical marine from previous studies and focus on the glacial-interglacial features, periodicity and forcing mechanisms of tropical marine productivity. We found that the productivity in most tropical sites decreased from MIS 2 to MIS 1. The productivity was not always higher in glacial: The glacial-interglacial pattern of productivity turned at MIS 22 in western Pacific. There were remarkable differences between tropical productivity and high latitude productivity. The precession and obliquity bands were more significant in tropical productivity and ~30 ka cycles caused by the superimposing of different orbital cycles were common in tropical. The coccolith based productivity seemed to have a quasiperiod of 400 ka and more researches are needed to discover the relationship between productivity and global 13C in this band.

No related articles found!
Viewed
Full text


Abstract