Title: GlobColour international context (as
1GlobColour international context (as seen from
IOCCG) Prepared by IOCCG Project
Office Presented by Eric Thouvenot (CNES
representative to IOCCG)
2IOCCGs perpective of International Context of
GlobCOLOUR
As operational oceanography grows, there is an
increased demand for data and information
relevant to understanding the marine ecosystem at
the global level. Many issues could be addressed
using the GlobCOLOUR data set, both global and
regional. Example 1 Yoder research -
long-term time series are required to examine
changes in global chlorophyll levels and to sort
out differences between cycles and trends.
Example 2 Platt research - long-term ocean
colour time series can explain haddock
recruitment fluctuations in the Northwest
Atlantic. There is great potential that the
GlobCOLOUR dataset will provide similar answers
elsewhere. The GlobCOLOUR dataset is also
relevant to several of the tasks of the
intergovernmental Group on Earth Observations
(GEO), which is leading a worldwide effort to
build a Global Earth Observation System of
Systems.
3Example 1 Yoder slides
4Are Phytoplankton Biomass and Productivity
Declining in Large Parts of the Global Ocean
Owing to Climate Change Effects on
Stratification? Jim Yoder Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution
5Questions
- Are model and SeaWiFS phytoplankton chlorophyll
(Chl) trends similar during the SeaWiFS-era
(1998-2005) in regions of the open ocean, i.e.
does the model agree with the satellite
observations? - Are model trends unusual during the SeaWiFS-era
compared to other 8-year intervals during the
model era (1958-2004)?
6Motivation and Background
- Three recent manuscripts indicate that
phytoplankton chlorophyll/carbon (Chl)
concentrations in large regions of the ocean are
decreasing, possibly owing to climate change
effects on ocean stratification. - Gregg, W. et al. 2005, Geophys. Res. Lett., 32,
L03606, doi 10.1029/2004GL021808. - Antoine et al. 2005, J. Geophys. Res., 110,
C06009, doi 10.1029/2004JC002620. - Behrenfeld et al. 2006, Nature 444
doe10.1038/nature0517
7Trend in SeaWiFS Mean Chlorophyll (1997-2003)
(from Gregg et al. 2005)
8Percent differences (red is 100, blue is
lt50) in SeaWiFS (1998-2002) to CZCS (1979-1983)
annual mean chlorophyll (from Antoine et al. 2005)
9Trend in SeaWiFS chlorophyll, net primary
production (NPP) and stratification anomalies
(MEI) for stratified waters of the global ocean
(from Behrenfeld et al. 2006)
Chl (line)
MEI (circles)
Chl trend(line)
10Impact of 96-97 ENSO on Satellite SST and Chl
Anomalies (from Yoder, J.A. and M.A. Kennelly.
2003. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 17 (4), 1112.
). Note that SST and (inverse) Chl anomalies
track ENSO index.
low
Global anomalies (mean seasonal trend removed
from each pixel) summed from 50S to 50N.
Blue is negative Chl (i.e. 0 - Chl) Black is
SST. Red is Nino 3.4 index.
11Approach
- Use the model to see if the trends observed in
SeaWiFS imagery are also evident in the longer
record (46 years) of the model. - Answer the following questions
- Are model and SeaWiFS phytoplankton chlorophyll
(Chl) trends similar during the SeaWiFS-era
(1998-2005) in regions of the open ocean, i.e.
does the model agree with the satellite
observations? - Do model results indicate that the SeaWiFS-era
trends are representative of longer period trends
showing decreasing Chl concentrations possibly
linked to increasing ocean stratification?
12Model References
- Moore, J.K., S.C. Doney and K. Lindsay, 2004
Upper ocean ecosystem dynamics and iron cycling
in a global 3-D model, Global Biogeochem. Cycles,
18, 4, GB4028, 10.1029/2004GB002220. - Doney, S.C., K. Lindsay, I. Fung and J. John,
2006 Natural variability in a stable 1000 year
coupled climate-carbon cycle simulation, J.
Climate, 19(13), 3033-3054. - Doney, S.C., S. Yeager, G. Danabasoglu, W.G.
Large, and J.C. McWilliams, Mechanisms governing
interannual variability of upper ocean
temperature in a global hindcast simulation, J.
Phys. Oceanogr., in press.
13Brief Model Description
Starts with the 3-D physics of the Parallel Ocean
Program (POP) with 3.6 long and 0.9 to 2.0 lat
resolution, and we used monthly fields. Forced
by NCEP reanalysis fields. Embeds a
multi-element, multi-functional group ecosystem
model (Moore et al. 2004) and a marine
biogeochemistry model (Doney et al.
2006). Primary production is partitioned between
pico and nano phytoplankton and includes diatoms
and diazotrophs. N-fixation and calcification
are calculated. Zooplankton include micro and
larger forms. Nutrients include N, P, Si and Fe.
14Analysis Sites
11 (green dots) of our 34 stations are within
areas identified by Gregg et al as showing
significant trends in SeaWiFS Chlorophyll. Used
these sites to examine model and SeaWifS Chl
trends.
15Conclusions
- Are model and SeaWiFS phytoplankton chlorophyll
(Chl) trends similar during the SeaWiFS-era
(1998-2005) in selected regions of the open
ocean, i.e. does the model agree with the
satellite observations? - Yes.
- Do model results indicate that the SeaWiFS-era
trends are representative of longer period trends
showing decreasing Chl concentrations possibly
linked to increasing ocean stratification? - No, the model shows that there are 8-year
periods of both increasing and decreasing
chlorophyll trends throughout the model era
(1958-2004).
16Speculation
- Trends observed during SeaWiFS era are related to
the very large ENSO which began in 1996 and had
global impacts for many years (e.g. see Yoder,
J.A. and M.A. Kennelly. 2003. Global
Biogeochemical Cycles, 17 (4), 1112. ). Thus, he
apparent changes (both increases and declines
depending on ocean region may not reflect a long
term trend.
Yoder and Kennelly 2003
Behrenfeld et al. 2006
17Example 2 Platt slides
18Example 2 Using ocean-colour remote sensing as a
tool for development of ecological indicators in
the coastal zone (Platt 2003, plus unpublished
data)
Ecological indicators are an aid to
ecosystem-based management essential to have
long time series. With ocean colour data,
construction of time series is possible at any
chosen scale of spatial averaging.
Time series in NW Atlantic note differences in
the timing of the spring bloom from year to year
and region to region. (SeaWiFS data)
19Quantifying Seasonality
Any or all of these indices may vary between
years (at any or all of the pixels in the region
of interest)
Platt, Sathyendranath Fuentes-Yaco, 2007
20Using time-series data to test Cushings
Match-Mismatch Hypothesis Test whether
significant proportion of variance in larval
abundance (survival) can be accounted for by
variations in ecosystem indices (interannual
fluctuations in dynamics of spring bloom).
Anomalies for Timing of Chlorophyll a Maxima
(February - July)
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
Platt et al. 2003
21Using time-series data from CZCS and SeaWiFS, it
appears that greatest larval survival coincides
with an earlier spring bloom.
Haddock survival in the NW Atlantic (after Platt
et al. 2003)
22- Where number of haddock larvae and biomass of
phytoplankton overlap, larvae have food supply
adequate for survival - Where this is not so, larvae are vulnerable to
death by starvation
Early blooms imply a smaller blue area and a
smaller proportion of the total larvae produced
at risk from inadequate food supply
23Conclusion
- Remotely-sensed data are useful for
construction of time series, but requires care in
quality control. - Time series provide cost-effective basis for
development of - ecological indicators, averaged at appropriate
time and space scales. - Even with only two remotely-sensed variables
(chlorophyll and temperature), a rich set of
ecological indicators can be derived. - The SeaWiFS 10-year series has yielded
interesting results. The GlobCOLOUR data set will
likely add more.
24Part 3 GlobColour and GEO
25GlobCOLOUR and GEO
Other Relevant International Projects
- The GlobCOLOUR dataset may also be relevant to
the following GEO tasks - ChloroGIN Project (Chlorophyll Global
Integrated Network). GEO Task EC-06-07. - The SAFARI Project (Societal Applications in
Fisheries and Aquaculture using - Remote Sensing Imagery). GEO Task AG-06-02.
- Global Ecosystems Classification and Mapping
Initiative (GEO Task EC-06-02)
26ChloroGIN Project (Task EC-06-07)
Chlorophyll Global Integrated Network
- Goals
- To develop a global network which will provide
information on marine ecosystems for use at
national and regional scales, using a combination
of Earth observation (EO) data from satellites
(Chl and SST) and in situ observations. - To integrate in situ and remote observations
into a single network - this will improve
understanding of ecosystem processes and dynamics
and will help in fisheries management. - To provide a timely delivery of data and
information that will benefit society.
27ChloroGIN Project contd.
- Data delivery may be in near-real time (NRT) or
delayed mode time series data (similar to
GlobCOLOUR dataset, but not merged data). - Latin American network (ANTARES) already
established with the aim of studying long-term
changes in coastal ecosystems. In situ and
satellite data from around South America shared. - ChloroGIN Africa web portal was recently
established along the same lines as ANTARES. - GlobCOLOUR dataset may help fill some of the
gaps of ChloroGIN
ChloroGIN Africa
ANTARES (South America)
28SAFARI Project (Task AG-06-02)
Societal Applications in Fisheries and
Aquaculture using Remotely-sensed Imagery
Project initiated October 2007 Funded by The
Canadian Space Agency Chairman Dr. Trevor Platt
- Project Goals
- To coordinate, at the international scale,
various earth-observation initiatives related to
fisheries and aquaculture, and add to their value
through synergy. - Project Execution
- Host an international coordination workshop
- Publish an IOCCG monograph on the state of the
art - Highlight excellent demonstration projects of
EO in fisheries - Develop an outreach component to increase
awareness of the value of EO in the fisheries and
aquaculture sector - Convene an international symposium on this
timely topic
29SAFARI Demonstration Projects
- Examples of some elements that may be included in
SAFARI and are relevant to GlobCOLOUR - An internationally-coordinated programme in the
Northwest Atlantic Ocean (SHRIMP) to relate
relative abundance and growth of the Northern
Shrimp to ecosystem fluctuations, as indexed by
remote sensing of ocean colour - A Canadian programme on development and testing
of ecological indicators for the pelagic zone, as
deduced from EO data, and evaluation of their
utility for ecosystem-based management. - The design of an ocean-colour constellation of
satellites for long-term, uninterrupted,
internally-consistent stream of remotely-sensed
data for operational applications (initiative of
the IOCCG). - Southern African work on integrated,
ecosystem-based and cooperative management of the
Benguela ecosystem.
30Global Ecosystems Classification and Mapping
Initiative (Task EC-06-02)
- Aim
- To establish an ecosystem classification task
force, covering freshwater, terrestrial and ocean
ecosystems, with a mandate to create a globally
agreed, robust and viable classification scheme
for ecosystems.
- In parallel with the classification effort,
develop, review, and initiate a mapping approach
to spatially delineate the classified ecosystems.
31Global Ecosystems Classification and Mapping
- Global ecosystems can be classified at the
meso-scale (on the order of 10 to 103 km2) - A biophysical stratification approach can be
adopted for terrestrial, freshwater and marine
ecosystem delineation. - For the oceans, the approach of Longhursts
(1998) biogeochemical provinces can adopted.
Longhurst Partition
Boundaries may move seasonally (Devred 2007)
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33Summary
- We still lack sufficiently long satellite time
series to sort out differences between cycles and
trends. - We need a sustained international effort to make
sure we can link one satellite data set to
another to build the long time series that we
need. - GlobColour is definitely a significant step in
that perspective