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Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE Dave Siegel University of California, Santa Barbara
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Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Jan 03, 2016

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Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE. Dave Siegel University of California, Santa Barbara. 6 12.011 C Carbon. Remote Sensing Carbon. Stocks pCO 2 , DIC, DOC, POC & PIC Components Community structure, calcifiers, N 2 fixers, etc. Fluxes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space

A RESPONSE

Dave SiegelUniversity of California, Santa

Barbara

Page 2: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

6 12.011

CCarbon

Page 3: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing Carbon

• Stocks

– pCO2, DIC, DOC, POC & PIC

• Components

– Community structure, calcifiers, N2 fixers, etc.

• Fluxes

– Air-sea, export, net community production, etc.

Page 4: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing Carbon

• Ocean color is not perfect for this task

Optical properties are not carbon species

CDOM is not DOC, optical backscattering is not

POC

• Need to think like paleo-oceanographers…

Develop “quantitative proxies”

But … test them using real observations

Page 5: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Some Examples…

• Stocks

– POC

– pCO2

– CDOM (This is a shameless plug for our CDOM poster!!)

• Components

– Calcifiers - coccolithophorid bloom occurrence

• Fluxes

– Air-sea CO2 fluxes

Page 6: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of POC

Relate POC to estimates of optical backscattering by particle

Loisel et al. [2002] GRL

April 1998

Page 7: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of POC

SeaWiFS chlorophyll

concentration

April 1998

SeaWiFS POC

Page 8: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of POC

Average for the North Atlantic (0 to 60oN)

“POC” Chlorophyll

Page 9: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of POC

• POC patterns are very different from chlorophyll

• Validation at BATS & HOT is OK, but not great– Ratios of satellite to field POC are 1.22 (± 0.37) @ BATS & 0.94

(±0.27) @ HOT

• Enables POC budgets to be assessed

– Mean POC = 54 mg C m-3

• Large uncertainty in conversion from optics to POC

– Estimated to be ~40% - Improvements are underway

Page 10: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of Calcifiers

Coccolithophorid bloom classification

Iglesias-Rodríguez et al. [2002] GBC

Page 11: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remotely Sensing of Calcifiers

• Classification analysis based on observations of

coccolithophorid blooms

• Enables space/time characteristics of

coccolithophorid blooms to be assessed

• First (& probably easiest) step towards

determining phytoplankton community structure

remotely

Page 12: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Air-Sea CO2 Fluxes

• Relate observations of

pCO2 to SST

• Satellite SST to map

pCO2

• Highly variable relationship

Lee et al. [1998] Nature

Page 13: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Air-Sea CO2 Fluxes

Incorporating winds enables air-sea CO2 fluxes to be estimated

Page 14: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Air-Sea CO2 Fluxes

• Used regional relationships for pCO2 as f(SST)

• Drive with remote estimates of wind & SST

• Approach has promise, but we need a better

way to predict pCO2

• What if climate change, alters pCO2 =f(SST)??

Page 15: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

6 12.011

CCarbon

Page 16: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing Carbon

• Ocean color is not easily related to carbon

– Chlorophyll is not carbon

• Key is using “real” observations to build

simple models

– Global data are finally available – more in future

– The JGOFS legacy is its open data access

– We are really just at the beginning of this work

Page 17: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

The Future is Remotely Sensible

• There are many applications under

consideration

– Primary production & export fluxes

– Photochemical rxn rates (CO, CO2, COS, etc.)

– DMSP/DMS cycling & air-sea DMS fluxes

– Trichodesmium distributions

– Physiological status from fluorescence

– and many more …

Page 18: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Thank you!!

Page 19: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of DOC

Colored Detrital & Dissolved Organic Material Absorption

Siegel et al. [2002] JGR

Page 20: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of DOC

NH Winter DOC Distribution

Siegel et al. [2002] JGR

Page 21: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of Trichodesmium

Index for Trichodesmium occurrence

Toby Westberry [work in progress]

Page 22: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of DIC & pCO2

• Empirical approach for the Tropical Pacific

• Model …

DIC = f(SST,SSS)

TA = f(SST,SSS)

Loukos et al [2000] GRL

Fall ‘92

Spring ’92 DIC

pCO2

Page 23: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of DIC

& pCO2

• Average from 5oS to 10oN

• 1982 to 1994

• SST, SSS & wind products used

pCO2 GasEx

Flux

Page 24: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of DIC & pCO2

Anomalous evasion is well related to

SOI

SOI

Page 25: Reenvisioning the Ocean: The View from Space A RESPONSE

Remote Sensing of DIC & pCO2

• Empirically model DIC & TA for Tropical Pacific

• Drive this with remote sensing (& other) data

• Find relationship between CO2 evasion & SOI

• BUT, evasion flux uncertainties are ~50%

• More field observations should help

• So would the remote sensing of sea surface

salinity