Title: The Southern Ocean Observing System SOOS
1The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS)
With additional support from
2Talk Outline
- Why are coherent, sustained observations of the
Southern Ocean needed? - Who would use them?
- What aspects of the Southern Ocean would a
monitoring system address, and how? - What is already in place, and what are the gaps?
- Where are we in relation to planning and
implementing the observing system, and what is
next? - How would a SOOS link to other international
efforts?
3Talk Outline
- Why are coherent, sustained observations of the
Southern Ocean needed? - Who would use them?
- What aspects of the Southern Ocean would a
monitoring system address, and how? - What is already in place, and what are the gaps?
- Where are we in relation to planning and
implementing the observing system, and what is
next? - How would a SOOS link to other international
efforts?
4Global reach of the Southern Ocean
Lumpkin and Speer (2006)
Critical part of the global thermohaline
circulation
5 Change in zonally-integrated ocean heat content
since 1955 is largest in the southern oceans
Levitus et al., 2005
Important term in global heat budget, but
Southern Ocean is still undersampled compared
with rest of World Ocean
6 Boening et al., 2008
7Warming in ACC, no change in overturning?
Comparison of Argo CTD data along streamlines
shows warming across the Southern Ocean,
strongest on southern flank of ACC. Southward
shift of isopycnals BUT little change in tilt,
hence no change in upwelling (unlike in IPCC
models).
Boening et al., 2008
8Freshening of AABW
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10The Weddell gyre circulation and the area of
observations carried out during WECCON and CASO
Fahrbach, AWI
11Area of WSBW on the transect decreased by
25 from 1992 to 2008
1992
2008
Fahrbach, AWI
12Bottom melting heat source and effect of
pressure.
- Mode 1 Thermohaline circulation induced by sea
ice formation and drainage of dense saline water.
Melting point decreases as much as 1oC due to
0.00075 oC/dbar-1 - Mode 2 Direct inflow of intermediate-depth
warm water from the slope-front region (e.g.
Circumpolar Deep Water intrusion through deep
troughs). - Mode 3 Ice-front interactions (tidal pumping,
coastal currents)
AASW
CDW
ISW
Jacobs et al., 1992
- Ice shelf water may refreeze to form marine ice,
or sink to participate in the formation of
Antarctic bottom water, which regulates global
climate. - Mode 1 dominates for large ice shelves in the
Weddell, and Ross seas. - Mode 2 melts large volumes of ice where deep
water has access to glacier grounding lines, e.g.
Amundsen Sea.
13Conclusions
- Ice shelf melting controls gt 50 of the ice
sheet/ice shelf mass balance. - This neglects ice-front sub-aqueous melting.
- Low melt on large ice shelves (far from CDW),
Queen Maud Land, East Peninsula. - High melt on West Peninsula (CDW), Amundsen,
Bellingshausen sea (CDW), Wilkes Land (?). - Quadratic dependence on temperature where CDW
fuels high melt. - Elsewhere, linear relationship might still hold
but not enough ocean temperature data near GL.
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16Ocean uptake of carbon dioxide
Sabine et al., 2004
Southern Ocean a key region for uptake of
anthropogenic CO2 but is the carbon sink
weakening (Le Quéré etc)?
17Le Quere et al., 2007
18Why a SOOS (continued) ?
- Krill stocks in key parts of the Southern Ocean
are in steep decline need to understand why, and
the implications.
(Atkinson et al., Nature, 2004)
19Why a SOOS (continued) ?
- Changes in Southern Ocean temperature and
circulation could have strong impacts on West
Antarctic ice sheet (and hence global sea level) - Nutrients exported from the Southern Ocean
support 75 of oceanic primary production north
of 30S (Sarmiento et al.) - The Southern Ocean includes some of the most
productive and unique marine ecosystems on Earth - etc
20Why do we care if SO changes?
- Potential for positive feedbacks influencing
global climate - Sea ice albedo
- Carbon uptake
- Thermohaline circulation
- Sea-level rise
- Impact of acidification on ecosystems
- Impact of climate change on ecosystems (warming,
freshening, ?mixed layer, ?light, ?circulation,
?sea ice, ?winds)
21Talk Outline
- Why are coherent, sustained observations of the
Southern Ocean needed? - Who would use them?
- What aspects of the Southern Ocean would a
monitoring system address, and how? - What is already in place, and what are the gaps?
- Where are we in relation to planning and
implementing the observing system, and what is
next? - How would a SOOS link to other international
efforts?
22Potential users of a SOOS include
- Research community
- Resource managers (including CCAMLR etc)
- Policy makers (when is it time to act? What are
the consequences of not acting?) - IPCC
- Local planners (sea-level rise)
- Antarctic tourism
- Shipping operations
- Weather and climate forecasters
- Education
- Etc.
23Talk Outline
- Why are coherent, sustained observations of the
Southern Ocean needed? - Who would use them?
- What aspects of the Southern Ocean would a
monitoring system address, and how? - What is already in place, and what are the gaps?
- Where are we in relation to planning and
implementing the observing system, and what is
next? - How would a SOOS link to other international
efforts?
24Scope of the SOOS
- Space
- circumpolar
- Subtropical Front to coast / ice shelf grounding
line - Time
- days to decades (longer-term proxies from ice and
sediment cores are critical, but lie outside of
SOOS) - Domain
- sea surface to sea floor (including bathymetry)
- ocean sea ice
- include air-sea flux, not upper atmosphere
- include sub-ice shelf cavity, not glacial ice
itself - Feasibility/readiness
- consider READY NOW, 5-10 YEAR VISION and BY 2030
- consider both MINIMAL and IDEAL
25Scope of the SOOS
- Discipline
- physics (ocean circulation and sea ice)
- biology and ecology (microbes to whales...)
- biogeochemistry
- bathymetry
- surface meteorology
- Models Emphasis is on sustained observations,
but modelling plays a key role in - system design
- interpolation and interpretation of sparse
observations - demonstrating utility of SOOS (eg initialisation
of climate models)
26Talk Outline
- Why are coherent, sustained observations of the
Southern Ocean needed? - Who would use them?
- What aspects of the Southern Ocean would a
monitoring system address, and how? - What is already in place, and what are the gaps?
- Where are we in relation to planning and
implementing the observing system, and what is
next? - How would a SOOS link to other international
efforts?
27Some examples of observing system elements
already in place
28Hydrography CTD/XBT/CO2 5-10 yr interval
29Argo
http//argo.ocean.fsu.edu/
30Sound sources deployed in Weddell Sea to track
modified Argo floats under ice
31Temperature and current field in the area of Maud
Rise derived from floats Olaf Klatt
32 Tagging of marine mammals (SEaOS etc)
33Elephant seal oceanography
Mapping the ocean underneath the sea ice for the
first time (Charassin et al., PNAS, 2008).
34SEaOS Number of profiles
SODB 10513 Argo 19463 SEaOS 22230
Courtesy L. Boehme
http//biology.st-andrews.ac.uk/seaos/index.html
35Mapping high latitude fronts
36Sea ice formation from salinity change
Charassin et al., PNAS, 2008
37Near circumpolar coverage from elephant seal data
Other species can be targeted to access specific
icy regions. Invaluable data for both ecological
and physical sciences.
38Continuous Plankton Recorder Tows 1991-2008
The Survey coversgt70 of the Southern
Ocean October to April
Approximately40-50 tows each year gt4,000 samples
p.a. 5 n-mile resolution
135,000 nauticalmiles of data havebeen
collected since 1991
This represents morethan 27,000 samples, 200
taxa environmental data
Australia, Japan, NZ, Germany, UK, USA, Russia
Hosie et al
39- Above plus-
- Satellites (e.g. SeaWiFS, Cryosat)
- Current meter arrays
- Tide gauge network
- Sediment trap moorings
- Underway measurements (e.g. CO2 , Salinity)
- Sea ice thickness snow cover drift
- Etc.
What observing system elements are already in
place?
40Gaps in the observing system in the Southern
Ocean region
- Ice-covered regions still poorly sampled, despite
progress - Deep ocean below depth of Argo
- Ocean in ice shelf cavities
- Seabed is poorly observed (benthic communities
etc) - Non-physical measurements rarely routinely made
(need other sensors for Argo etc) - etc
41Gaps in the observing system in the Southern
Ocean region
- Routine measurements beneath the ice shelves
required to understand how the ocean/ice-shelf
interaction will change as the climate alters,
and what the impacts may be for deep and bottom
water formation and the global overturning in the
ocean - Development of new sensors and methodologies is
key (e.g. biogeochemistry sensors to Argo floats,
automated under-ice measuring systems, technology
to study the long-term impact of seasonal ice
cover on pelagic and benthic communities)
42Gaps in the observing system in the Southern
Ocean region
- Need to sample the polar oceans routinely and
cost-effectively with an appropriate level of
coverage to capture the main oceanographic,
meteorological, cryospheric and ecosystems
processes taking place there that contribute to
global change
43Talk Outline
- Why are coherent, sustained observations of the
Southern Ocean needed? - Who would use them?
- What aspects of the Southern Ocean would a
monitoring system address, and how? - What is already in place, and what are the gaps?
- Where are we in relation to planning and
implementing the observing system, and what is
next? - How would a SOOS link to other international
efforts?
44SOOS Timeline
- August 2006 Initial scoping workshop, Hobart
- October 2007 Workshop in Bremen. Planning and
writing tasks assigned - July 2008 St. Petersburg progress review meeting
- January 2009 Make draft SOOS planning document
available to community for comment - February 2009 Comments received
- March 2009 Publish report
- April 2009 Commence implementation...
45SOOS Structure
- SOOS planning document (to go out to the
community for comment) will outline the aspects
discussed here- - why sustained observations are needed in the
Southern Ocean and what science/policy questions
they address, - what mix of observations are required to address
these questions, - what is presently done and what is possible,
- a vision for the future (in 5-10 years and by
2030)
46SOOS designed to address six key challenges
- Role of Southern Ocean in global freshwater
balance - Stability of Southern Ocean overturning
- Stability of Antarctic ice sheet and future
contribution to sea-level rise - Future of Southern Ocean carbon uptake
- Future of Antarctic sea ice
- Impacts of climate change on Antarctic ecosystems
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48(draft)
49Strawman Southern Ocean Observing System
- Initial SOOS consists of coordination/enhancement
of extant elements, as discussed, including- - Repeat full-depth hydro/tracer sections along
WOCE lines - Profiling floats, open ocean and under sea ice
- Sensors on marine mammals
- Sea ice observations
- Ocean-ice shelf interaction
- Surface meteorology observations
- Surface and sea-ice drifters
- Ecological monitoring
-
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52 CFC-11
Orsi et al., 1999
53Strawman Southern Ocean Observing System
- 5-10 years and 2030 vision (see planning
document for details) as previous, but including - Enhanced profiling floats with additional
sensors, depth range and longevity. - Cost-effective time series stations, using data
capsule technology and expendable moorings. - Supply/research ships doing routine
surveys/sections on way into Antarctic bases - Network of integrated fast ice mass balance
stations - A network of ice-capable gliders
- etc
54Strawman Southern Ocean Observing System
- SOOS coordination group to oversee the
implementation of the observing system, plus- - Relevant data archaeology
- Delivery of Southern Ocean climate information
- Modeling
- Identification of remote sensing needs
- Identification of key gaps requiring enhanced
process understanding - Array design studies
- Technology development requirements
-
55Strawman Southern Ocean Observing System
- As an example recommended repeat hydrography,
with countries committed or interested in
occupying the lines.
56Talk Outline
- Why are coherent, sustained observations of the
Southern Ocean needed? - Who would use them?
- What aspects of the Southern Ocean would a
monitoring system address, and how? - What is already in place, and what are the gaps?
- Where are we in relation to planning and
implementing the observing system, and what is
next? - How would a SOOS link to other international
efforts?
57SOOS Implementation
- Buy-in of international programmes of relevance
to SOOS (SCAR, SCOR, GOOS, CAML, POGO,
WCRP,JCOMM, GCOS...), leading environmental
agencies and other key players. - Links between SOOS, research programmes and
international organisations will be effected by
the SOOS coordination group. - Group will also oversee coordination of field
activities development of a funding strategy
etc.
58SOOS and POGO
- POGO was one of the initial supporters and
sponsors of SOOS continuing endorsement is
needed. - POGO community can help by circulating details of
the planning document and sending feedback to
Steve Rintoul (Steve.Rintoul_at_csiro.au) and/or
Mike Sparrow (mds68_at_cam.ac.uk) - To be successful, SOOS will need all nations with
current active interests in the Southern Ocean to
participate, and to draw new nations in POGO
can stimulate this. -
59More information
(www.clivar.org/organization/southern/expertgroup/
SOOS.htm)
60A final word
Many more voyages of discovery are also needed,
especially in the vast expanses of the southern
seas that remain relatively unexplored Trouble
d Waters The Economist, Jan 3rd 2009