Shaoping Shang
Xiamen University
13 Papers
133 Citations
Shaoping Shang is an academic researcher from Xiamen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytoplankton & Upwelling. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 13 publications.
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Papers
Changes of temperature and bio-optical properties in the South China Sea in response to Typhoon Lingling, 2001
Shaoling Shang,Li Li,Fengqin Sun,Jingyu Wu,Chuanmin Hu,Dewen Chen,Xiuren Ning,Yun Qiu,Caiyun Zhang,Shaoping Shang +9 more
TL;DR: Shang et al. as discussed by the authors reported that the area under typhoon impact covered ca. 3 latitude and 4 longitude, and resulted in carbon fixation in the order of 0.37 mg/m 3 on 11/14.
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Tide-surge Interaction Intensified by the Taiwan Strait
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented the results of the National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP) and the National High-tech RD Program (NHDP) in Fujian Province, China.
Ocean response to typhoons in the western North Pacific: Composite results from Argo data
Sheng Lin,Wen-Zhou Zhang,Shaoping Shang,Huasheng Hong +3 more
- 01 May 2017
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed ocean responses to typhoons and the dynamic mechanisms inherent in those responses with a particular focus on upwelling, and suggested that the sea surface cooling effect of vertical mixing can be enhanced by the upwelled.
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A new approach to discriminate dinoflagellate from diatom blooms from space in the East China Sea
TL;DR: In this article, a classification approach for separating dinoflagellate from diatom blooms in the East China Sea (ECS) was developed: when fluorescence line height (FLH) is doubled over the background level and total absorption coefficient at 443 nm≥ 0.5 m−1, if 0.0 < BI ≤ 0.3, it suggests a dinoflaglate bloom; if 0 3 ≤ BI ≤ 1.0, it suggest a diatom bloom.
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Short-term variability of chlorophyll associated with upwelling events in the Taiwan Strait during the southwest monsoon of 1998
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated short-term variability of chlorophyll associated with upwelling events in the western Taiwan Strait in 1998 and found that large extents of eutrophic waters were always accompanied by colder up-welling waters, indicative of the tight coupling of chlorophll with up-watering activities.
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