1 / 24

Planning the infrastructure for marine monitoring and operational oceanography

Planning the infrastructure for marine monitoring and operational oceanography. Lennart Funkquist Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. Figures are taken from a new SMHI report:

tamira
Download Presentation

Planning the infrastructure for marine monitoring and operational oceanography

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Planning the infrastructure for marine monitoring and operational oceanography Lennart FunkquistSwedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute Figures are taken from a new SMHI report: Karlson B., P. Axe, L. Funkquist, S. Kaitala and K. Sørensen (2009). Infrastructure for marine monitoring and operational oceanography, Reports Oceanography No. 39, Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  2. Swedish Coastal Waters some areal facts • Economical zone is about 155 000 km² • Territorial water amounts to about 82 000 km² • European Water Framework Directive (WFD) only contains about 36 000 km² • But the whole Skagerrak, Kattegat and Baltic Sea may be regarded as coastal waters • The length of the Swedish coastline is 11 500 or 32 000 km depending on definition • About 100 000 islands Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  3. Marine environmental monitoring • National goals - 16 environmental goals • International conventions - HELCOM - OSPAR - EU Water Framework Directory - EU INSPIRE directory - EU Marine Strategy Framework Directory - EU Shellfish Hygiene Directive - EU Shellfish Water Directive - IMO Ballast water convention Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  4. Problems in marine monitoring MERIS Horizontal patchiness MODIS Coccolithophorid 31 May 2004 Cyanobacteria 31 July 2008 Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  5. Problems in marine monitoring Central Skagerrak Temporal patchiness 2003 Example of influence of sampling frequency FerryBox vs Argos data Vertical patchiness Kattegat 1998 2004 2007 Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  6. Requirements from operational oceanography Real time Buoys Satellites Ships Hindcast Satellite products Analysed FerryBox data Expedition data Validation Available data sets Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  7. What do we have today ?

  8. Existing Swedish long term monitoring stations for pelagic biology Ship-based monitoring Most stations are visited 12 times per year A few of them 24 timesper year Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  9. Existing Swedish real-time buoys for physical parameters Three wave buoys with SST sensor Two profiling systems One test system N.B. Not shown are the three German buoys in SW Baltic Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  10. Remote sensing Chl-a in Skagerrak from FerryBox and MERIS in Feb 2008. Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  11. FerryBox lines FerryBox lines, existing and proposed Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  12. Comparison Ferrybox data with satellite data and in situ data 17 March 2007 FerryBox between Norway and Denmark Station BY1 in SW Baltic in 2006 Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  13. Comparison between FerryBox data and ship data in Skagerrakk Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  14. What do we propose ?

  15. New FerryBox lines Existing and planned FerryBox lines in the Baltic Sea Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  16. Existing and proposed FerryBox lines Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  17. Existing and proposed Swedish moorings Also shown is the Estonian mooring outside Tallinn. One mooring in each main sub-basin of theBaltic for data assimilation and climate time series N.B. Not shown are the three German buoys in SW Baltic Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  18. ODON project – a way to optimize the observational network Existing (red) and proposed (blue) network of observations in the Baltic Sea (left) and the transition area (right) Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  19. Proposed coastal moorings Division of the coast into different water types New type of communication Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  20. Different type of buoys • Examples • Waverider with SST • Oceanor buoy • Måseskär buoy • Winch based buoys US • Italian winch type • Piles Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  21. Fine-resolution (60m) operational local models Afjord in Skagerrak Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  22. Enironmental status indicators • Physical • Exchanges • Input • State • Chemical • Nutrients (input, fluxes, status, consumption) • Oil spill • Acidification • Oxygen • Biological • Production Proposed ”new” indicators- a few examples • Basin wide indicators • Indicators for acidification • Spring bloom index • Changes in plankton community structure • Physical climate indicators • Indicators for specific areas • -Transport between basins • - Inflow of water to the deep basins of the Baltic Proper Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  23. Proposed ”new” indicators- a few examples • Indicators for specific areas • - Transport between basins • - Inflow of water to the deep basins of the Baltic Proper • Basin wide indicators • Indicators for acidification • Spring bloom index • Changes in plankton community structure • Physical climate indicators Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

  24. Logistics • Establish co-operation between Swedish partners • Establish a national data host function for near real time oceanographic data • Establish a national function for purchasing and servicing of buoys etc. • Use new platforms such as wind mill parks as measurement platforms • The Water authorities could be responsible for coastal buoys • SMHI should be the leading partner in a consortium operating FerryBoxes and off shore buoys Abingdon,11-13 March 2009

More Related