Hong Kong's waters are
characterised by the interaction of oceanic
and estuarine water masses, which vary
in relative effects throughout the year.
The variable freshwater discharge from
the Pearl River has a marked influence
on Hong Kong waters.
During the summer, an
oceanic flow from the southwest to the
northeast brings the warm, high-salinity
water of the Hainan Current into Hong
Kong waters. This interacts with fresh
water from the Pearl River and divides
Hong Kong into three distinct zones. In
the west, where the fresh water influence
is greatest, the environment is estuarine
and the water is brackish. In the east,
the water is mainly oceanic with relatively
minor dilution from rainfall and runoff
from streams. The limits of the central
transitional zone vary depending upon
the relative influence of Pearl River
water and marine currents.
During the winter dry
season, the Kuroshio oceanic current brings
warm water of high salinity from the Pacific
through the Luzon Strait. The freshwater
discharge of the Pearl River is much lower
than in the summer and salinity is more
uniform across Hong Kong. The coastal
Taiwan current also brings cold water
from the northeast down the South China
coast, affecting inshore waters. The normal tidal range
in Hong Kong waters is between one and
two metres, depending on the relative
influence of the moon and sun. The tidal
pattern is complex due to the relative
effects of the diurnal and semi-diurnal
components. The basic pattern during flood
tides is for oceanic water to flow north
into Mirs Bay and west through Lei Yue
Mun into Victoria Harbour and through
Kap Shui Mun and the Ma Wan Channel. This
flow is reversed during the ebb tide.
Maximum tidal currents generally range
from 0.5 to 1.5 knots, peaking at up to
five knots in narrow channels. |