The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

An operational monitoring system to provide indicators of CO2-related variables in the ocean

An operational monitoring system to provide indicators of CO2-related variables in the ocean
An operational monitoring system to provide indicators of CO2-related variables in the ocean
Demand by governments and scientists is increasing for indicators of CO2-related variables for the ocean. We describe a recent project, CARBON-OPS, during which a "supply chain" was developed for automated measurement of pCO2 in the surface of the ocean, data processing, and its use in providing information for research and policy development. Data are gathered by new pCO2 measurement systems on five UK research ships in the Southern Ocean, Atlantic Ocean, and northwestern European shelf seas. These send data in near-real-time, via satellite communication systems, to the British Oceanographic Data Centre, where they are automatically processed, quality controlled, and archived. The data are then delivered to the UK Met Office and others for use in testing predictions from operational ocean models. These models will generate indicator products and assist government through the Marine Climate Change Impact Partnership, a partnership of scientists, government, its agencies, and NGOs, by providing information on ocean CO2 uptake, changes in ocean pH, and potential impacts on global climate and marine ecosystems.
autonomous systems, carbon dioxide, CO2, forecast, indicators, models, ocean acidification, operational oceanography, pH
1054-3139
1498-1503
Hardman-Mountford, Nicholas J.
d342998f-2b8b-4f4f-b75c-79491301f9bd
Moore, Gerald
bf3ec15f-4983-49d8-b7a7-fca236d87ce9
Bakker, Dorothee C. E.
45bd5b18-a7c0-4343-9972-c2e451bf773e
Watson, Andrew J.
55e619df-85a4-4079-922b-8cb1f17290a8
Schuster, Ute
3ba01afd-9a84-46e5-ae83-2e3ae708250f
Barciela, Rosa
894ab9ce-4dba-4347-a11b-618cfe632d5e
Hines, Adrian
912ac735-c1f2-42fa-a0cc-ab40ef06045d
Moncoiffe, Gwenaelle
843866df-ae07-4a41-a2c3-4c8ad8926391
Brown, Juan
42ceb879-95fd-4428-8413-b513e871f75a
Dye, Stephen
060292da-9b27-496b-b308-d1e8f25e1823
Blackford, Jerry
3ca0429d-e82b-4dbd-a394-015aba5979fa
Somerfield, Paul J.
0ca047e9-0757-49b3-b527-4e9c9ec22f93
Holt, Jason
6e0276a6-1a9b-4514-bc5f-9d04571b7687
Hydes, David J.
ac7371d4-c2b9-4926-bb77-ce58480ecff7
Aiken, James
b4214381-de3b-46b6-84b7-51af09439303
Hardman-Mountford, Nicholas J.
d342998f-2b8b-4f4f-b75c-79491301f9bd
Moore, Gerald
bf3ec15f-4983-49d8-b7a7-fca236d87ce9
Bakker, Dorothee C. E.
45bd5b18-a7c0-4343-9972-c2e451bf773e
Watson, Andrew J.
55e619df-85a4-4079-922b-8cb1f17290a8
Schuster, Ute
3ba01afd-9a84-46e5-ae83-2e3ae708250f
Barciela, Rosa
894ab9ce-4dba-4347-a11b-618cfe632d5e
Hines, Adrian
912ac735-c1f2-42fa-a0cc-ab40ef06045d
Moncoiffe, Gwenaelle
843866df-ae07-4a41-a2c3-4c8ad8926391
Brown, Juan
42ceb879-95fd-4428-8413-b513e871f75a
Dye, Stephen
060292da-9b27-496b-b308-d1e8f25e1823
Blackford, Jerry
3ca0429d-e82b-4dbd-a394-015aba5979fa
Somerfield, Paul J.
0ca047e9-0757-49b3-b527-4e9c9ec22f93
Holt, Jason
6e0276a6-1a9b-4514-bc5f-9d04571b7687
Hydes, David J.
ac7371d4-c2b9-4926-bb77-ce58480ecff7
Aiken, James
b4214381-de3b-46b6-84b7-51af09439303

Hardman-Mountford, Nicholas J., Moore, Gerald, Bakker, Dorothee C. E., Watson, Andrew J., Schuster, Ute, Barciela, Rosa, Hines, Adrian, Moncoiffe, Gwenaelle, Brown, Juan, Dye, Stephen, Blackford, Jerry, Somerfield, Paul J., Holt, Jason, Hydes, David J. and Aiken, James (2008) An operational monitoring system to provide indicators of CO2-related variables in the ocean. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 65 (8), 1498-1503. (doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsn110).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Demand by governments and scientists is increasing for indicators of CO2-related variables for the ocean. We describe a recent project, CARBON-OPS, during which a "supply chain" was developed for automated measurement of pCO2 in the surface of the ocean, data processing, and its use in providing information for research and policy development. Data are gathered by new pCO2 measurement systems on five UK research ships in the Southern Ocean, Atlantic Ocean, and northwestern European shelf seas. These send data in near-real-time, via satellite communication systems, to the British Oceanographic Data Centre, where they are automatically processed, quality controlled, and archived. The data are then delivered to the UK Met Office and others for use in testing predictions from operational ocean models. These models will generate indicator products and assist government through the Marine Climate Change Impact Partnership, a partnership of scientists, government, its agencies, and NGOs, by providing information on ocean CO2 uptake, changes in ocean pH, and potential impacts on global climate and marine ecosystems.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: November 2008
Keywords: autonomous systems, carbon dioxide, CO2, forecast, indicators, models, ocean acidification, operational oceanography, pH

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 50278
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/50278
ISSN: 1054-3139
PURE UUID: 74dd0ad6-dc8a-47ec-9016-3a49720b50bf

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Feb 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:04

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Nicholas J. Hardman-Mountford
Author: Gerald Moore
Author: Dorothee C. E. Bakker
Author: Andrew J. Watson
Author: Ute Schuster
Author: Rosa Barciela
Author: Adrian Hines
Author: Gwenaelle Moncoiffe
Author: Juan Brown
Author: Stephen Dye
Author: Jerry Blackford
Author: Paul J. Somerfield
Author: Jason Holt
Author: David J. Hydes
Author: James Aiken

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×