2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2007.02.007
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An overview of the Oyashio ecosystem

Abstract: The Oyashio shelf region and the seasonally ice-covered areas north of Hokkaido are highly productive, supporting a wide range of species including marine mammals, seabirds and commercially important species in the western subarctic Pacific. The fishes include gadids, such as walleye pollock and Pacific cod, and subarctic migratory pelagic fishes such as chum salmon and pink salmon. It is also an important summer feeding ground for subtropical migrants such as the Japanese sardine, Japanese anchovy, Pacific sa… Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…Zooplankton biomass is generally low in the warm Kuroshio water, except along the frontal or coastal regions, while primary productivity and zooplankton biomass are generally high in the cold Oyashio water (Odate 1994, Kasai et al 2001, Sakurai 2007. For this reason, the Oyashio is the main feeding grounds for many pelagic fish species (Odate 1994, Sakurai 2007. However, the distribution of these pelagic fishes is directly affected by water temperature (Oozeki et al 2007, Takasuka et al 2008b.…”
Section: Seasonal Changes In Foraging Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Zooplankton biomass is generally low in the warm Kuroshio water, except along the frontal or coastal regions, while primary productivity and zooplankton biomass are generally high in the cold Oyashio water (Odate 1994, Kasai et al 2001, Sakurai 2007. For this reason, the Oyashio is the main feeding grounds for many pelagic fish species (Odate 1994, Sakurai 2007. However, the distribution of these pelagic fishes is directly affected by water temperature (Oozeki et al 2007, Takasuka et al 2008b.…”
Section: Seasonal Changes In Foraging Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The northward seasonal movements appeared to match the seasonal development of oceanographic processes in the Kuroshio-Oyashio region. Zooplankton biomass is generally low in the warm Kuroshio water, except along the frontal or coastal regions, while primary productivity and zooplankton biomass are generally high in the cold Oyashio water (Odate 1994, Kasai et al 2001, Sakurai 2007. For this reason, the Oyashio is the main feeding grounds for many pelagic fish species (Odate 1994, Sakurai 2007.…”
Section: Seasonal Changes In Foraging Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Regime shifts have been reported for the North Pacific (1976/1977 and 1989) [6,[26][27][28][29], specifically the northeast Pacific (1976/1977) [30,31], (1998/1999) [32,33] and the northwest Pacific (1976/1977, 1988/1989 and 1998) [34][35][36]; the Humboldt Current in the southern Pacific (1968/1970 and 1984/1986) [37,38]; and the northwest Atlantic (1989Atlantic ( /1990 [39][40][41][42][43]. In addition, regime shifts were observed in the late 1980s around all European seas [8]: the North Sea [44,45], the Baltic Sea [9,46], the northwest European shelf seas (1987/1990) [47,48], the western [49] and eastern (Adriatic) Mediterranean Sea [8,50,51] and the Black Sea [52,53].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%