| Literature DB >> 31404217 |
Seth M Bushinsky1, Yuichiro Takeshita2, Nancy L Williams3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We summarize recent progress on autonomous observations of ocean carbonate chemistry and the development of a network of sensors capable of observing carbonate processes at multiple temporal and spatial scales. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Autonomous platforms; Carbonate observations; Ocean acidification; Ocean biogeochemical sensors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31404217 PMCID: PMC6659613 DOI: 10.1007/s40641-019-00129-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Clim Change Rep
Fig. 1Observational capabilities and carbonate system processes as a function of time and space. Ocean processes that affect the carbonate system (solid colored shapes with labels in the caption) are depicted as a function of the temporal and spatial scales over which they must be observed to capture important variability and/or long-term change. The ability of different platforms to capture carbonate system processes is overlaid for conventional approaches (red boxes, thinner lines) and autonomous arrays (black, thick lines). Not all observational platforms currently provide equivalent measurements capabilities, in terms of either parameters measured or spatial/temporal resolution. For example, profiling floats are only equipped with pH sensors at present, while the Volunteer Observing Ships provide only underway surface measurements. Furthermore, the capability of a given platform to provide long-duration measurements is not entirely captured in this figure; a research cruise may provide a snapshot of a mesoscale process over several weeks, but does not typically capture that process repeatedly over time. The exact spatial and temporal sampling area covered by each platform will change as arrays develop and mature; we have attempted to indicate the spatial sampling coverage likely over the next 5 years. Note that the mooring box includes both open-ocean observatories and compact, fixed observatories deployed in coastal and benthic regions. Box boundaries that are directly adjacent to one another (i.e., the upper boundaries of Profiling floats, Decadal Hydrographic Survey, and Volunteer Observing Ships) indicate the same temporal or spatial boundary but are offset for clarity