Ocean Observing Systems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Ocean Observing Systems

Description:

Ocean Observing Systems – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:54
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 70
Provided by: cul87
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Ocean Observing Systems


1
Ocean Observing Systems
BIOSOPE Cruise M. Lewis
2
and Wild-haired Scientists Anonymous
Jed
John
3
Ocean Observing Systems and the Interaction of
Technology, Information and Understanding
  • John J. Cullen
  • Centre for Marine Environmental Prediction
  • Department of Oceanography, Dalhousie University
  • Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4J1
  • 2006 Ocean Sciences Meeting
  • Honolulu February 23, 2006

Supported by CFCAS, NSERC, NOPP ONR
ICOOL
International Coalition of Ocean Observation
Laboratories
4
Inspiration
How to exploit our emergence from a century of
undersampling
5
Observationsthe foundation of ocean science



Observations are necessary but not sufficient
6
20th century oceanographyobservationswere
scarce
7
In retrospect, physical charts of temperature,
salinity, nutrients, and currents were so
unrealistic that they could not possibly have
been of any use to the biologists. Similarly,
scientists could find experimental support for
their favorite theory no matter what the theory
claimed. Walter Munk, 2002
8
But insight went a very long way
Sverdrups (1955) map of productivity based on
vertical convection, upwelling and turbulent
diffusion
Global productivity estimated from remote sensing
(Falkowski et al. 1998).
As presented by John McGowan (Oceanography Mag.,
2004)
9
Technical approach Thinking
R.W. Eppley
10
Products of 20th century oceanography
UNDERSTANDING and
KNOWLEDGE Producers John Martin, Wally
Broecker, Dick Dugdale, Dick Eppley
Conveyor Belt
11
The bar has been raisedWe need PREDICTIVE
CAPABILITY
HABs
http//ic.ucsc.edu/flegal/etox80e/SpecTopics/Alga
lBlooms/alg_p1.jpg
Decline of fish stocks since 1960
Global CO2 since 900 A.D. (IPCC TAR)
Myers and Worm Nature 2003
12
To do this, we needMECHANISTICUNDERSTANDING
OF OCEAN PROCESSES ON THE SCALES AT WHICH THEY
OCCUR
Chl - A. Thomas U of Maine
100 m currents - Earth Simulator - JAMSTEC
Modeled Chlorophyll Rothstein et al., Oceanogr.
Mag. In press
13
AND OBSERVATIONS ON THOSE SCALES
Donaghay et al.
NASA/GSFC
SeaWiFs Chlorophyll - Rothstein et al.
14
4-D Multi-scale Problems Require
Multi-platform Nesting Approaches
THE ISSUE IS SAMPLING!
Dickey, 2002
Roots from Henry Stommel and Lauren Haury
15
Strategies are Required
Cover figure from the Coastal Module Design Plan
16
Integrated Global Ocean Observing System
Requirements
  • Sustained
  • Synoptic
  • Interdisciplinary
  • Adequate resolution

Requirements depend on the users and phenomena
of interest
17
Common Variables Global, Coastal(first cut)
Design Plan for the Coastal Module of GOOS
18
Science must always move beyond common
variables




19
Fundamental requirement for environmental science
of the 21st century
making sense of it all
20
Prime goal Marine Environmental Prediction
21
Requirements for quantitative marine
environmental prediction
  • Resolve mesoscale variability
  • Ocean surface
  • Ocean interior (highly resolved vertically)
  • Take bio-optics beyond biomass
  • Describe biodiversity
  • Integrate observations and knowledge in
    interdisciplinary data assimilative ecological
    and biogeochemical models

22
Resolving Mesoscale Variability
McGillicuddy - PARADIGM
23
Remote sensing is revolutionary
http//www.angliacampus.com/public/sec/geog/coastl
n/page09.php
NASA/GSFC
24
Capabilities are Awesome
From a presentation by Mark Abbott
25
Capabilities are Awesome
Results are Important!
Decline of the 2002 - 2003 El Niño
From a presentation by Mark Abbott
26
The future Integrated, interdisciplinary
analyses on the scales that matter
Vector Winds and Sea Surface Temperature 2-4
Sept 1999
From a presentation by Mark Abbott
27
The next frontier Describing mesoscale
variability in the ocean interior
Ken Johnson MBARI
28
Autonomous Ocean Observatories
29
Coastal observatories are being developed
world-wideDifferent stages of development and
areas of emphasis
Rutgers
30
The MEPS-Bay Observing System measures physical,
chemical and biological variability in Lunenburg
Bay in real-time for incorporation into a
forecast model
www.cmep.ca/bay
P. Kuhn
31
An Integrated Network will be Developed
OceanSITES
32
ALPS will fillthe gaps ProfilersGlidersAUV
sThe oceanographers dream come true
33
ARGO Armada
34
(No Transcript)
35
Evolution of biology and physics on the scales
that matter
Glider survey
Chlorophyll from Fluorescence
FluorescenceBackscatter
MJ Perry et al. TOS 2005
36
Autonomous Biogeochemical Surveys Coming Soon
K. Johnson - MBARI
37
Taking bio-optics beyond biomass
38
20th century sciencePrimary Productivity from
Chlorophyll Irradiance Daylength
Temperature
marine.rutgers.edu/opp/
39
Conventional estimates of productivity do not
resolve much of the physiological variability in
the sea
Maximum P B (gC gChl-1 h-1)
Behrenfeld and Falkowski 1997 model
40
Frontiers in Remote Sensing of Biological
Properties
Chemical Composition and Physiological Status
Phytoplankton Growth Rate
Behrenfeld et al. 2004 GBC
41
Species composition (sometimes)
42
Amazing Potential for in situ Optical
Measurements
New Insights into Phytoplankton Dynamics from
Optical Observations
Heidi M. Sosik
ASLO/TOS 2004
43
We will see what we need to see
High-res profiles revealed steep gradients in
phytoplankton and dissolved organic matter. Phyto
and CDOM gradients each related to velocity shear
over narrow vertical intervals
Many phyto layers less than 1m thick
T. Cowles, OSU
44
Optical Proxies The Next Generation
45
Optical and Acoustical Properties will Provide
State Variables and Parameters that are Directly
Assimilated into Ecosystem Models
PARADIGM Oceanography Magazine 2006
46
Evolving Scientific Infrastructure Makes this
Possible
Ocean Observing Systems
Hydrological Atmospheric Optics
Acoustics
Physical, Chemical Biological Oceanography
Sensors and sampling
Diagnostic bio-optical models
Theory / Models
Process Studies
Physiological Ecology
47
SUN-INDUCED FLUORESCENCEthe only signal
detectable from space that can be unambiguously
ascribed to phytoplankton
Advertisement
MODIS - Letelier, Abbott OSU
48
Sun-induced fluorescence yield can vary a great
deal coherent with hydrographic forcing
Fluorescence (normalized to absorption) vs
irradiance
Bering Sea drifter data from Schallenberg et al.
49
But we dont know what it means
From Mark Abbott
50
Mars
  • Mars is red
  • We dont know exactly what it means, but it might
    hold fundamental clues about life
  • So we go to Mars

51
Fluorescence from the ocean
  • Fluorescence is red
  • We dont know exactly what it means, but it might
    hold fundamental clues about life
  • So

52
The Genomics Highway
February 2001
July 1995 The first whole genome
53
The Bus Has Left the Station
Genetic Inventory of the Planet
  • Predicted to be 20 to 30 billion unique genes
  • Most of them microbial
  • the next big thing

Craig Venter August 2004
From Penny Chisholm
54
A Tool for Making Sense of Microbial Diversity in
the Marine EnvironmentMargalefs Mandala
55
The Genomics Mandala?
Venter et al., Science, 2004
56
The critical ingredient ENVIRONMENTAL CONTEXT
Genetic variability related quantitatively to
well defined ecological regimes
Science, 2006
57
Metabolic function related to oceanographic
stratum
58
The challenge Get to this sooner rather than
later
Ocean Observing Systems
Genomics the other omics
Hydrological Atmospheric Optics
Acoustics
Physical Chemical Biological Oceanography
Integrated interdisciplinary sensor systems
Assimilative biogeochemical models
Theory / Models
Process Studies
Physiological Ecology Including Gene Expression
59
Interdisciplinary teams are not just a good idea
they are the only way to achieve synthesis and
prediction
60
Ultimate Goal An Interdisciplinary, Coupled,
and Data Assimilating Observation and Modeling
System
Bays to Basins
61
We will need Sense-Making Tools in a world of
Too Much Information
after Paul Saffo Institute for the Future
Knowledge Insight for Research Education
Outreach Management
62
The VISION PortalVirtual-reality Information
System and Integrated Ocean-observing
NetworkAll-Ocean-Knowledge.com
  • Virtual reality access to all ocean environments
  • Fully 4-dimensional
  • Scalable from global to mm
  • Physical, chemical, biological
  • Direct access to oceanographic data
  • Integrated with the Global Ocean Observing System
  • DATA
  • MODELS
  • Contextual hyperlinks to scientific literature
    and databases
  • Multiple levels of interaction
  • Entertainment, education, exploration, research,
    prediction

63
Access Data and Models in Real Time
Josh Kohut - Rutgers - COOL
64
Probe the Ocean Depths
Brandon Sackmann, University of
Maine http//optics.dmc.maine.edu/sackmann/wash_co
ast/WashCoastAnim.avi
65
Switch to layers for all ocean information systems
66
Layers for All Ocean Knowledge
  • Weather
  • Hazards
  • History
  • Currents
  • Shipwrecks
  • Surf Report
  • Minerals
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Forecasts
  • Climate models
  • Bottom type
  • Genomics
  • Sea Life

67
The VISION PortalVirtual-reality Information
System and Integrated Ocean-observing Network
  • Virtual reality access to all ocean environments
  • Fully 4-dimensional
  • Scalable from global to mm
  • Physical, chemical, biological
  • Direct access to oceanographic data
  • Integrated with the Global Ocean Observing System
  • DATA
  • MODELS
  • Contextual hyperlinks to scientific literature
    and databases
  • Multiple levels of interaction
  • Entertainment, education, exploration, research,
    prediction

68
Why not?
The VISION PortalVirtual-reality Information
System and Integrated Ocean-observing Network
Thank you!
69
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com