globalchange  > 全球变化的国际研究计划
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2019.00433
WOS记录号: WOS:000479257100001
论文题名:
Delivering Sustained, Coordinated, and Integrated Observations of the Southern Ocean for Global Impact
作者: Newman, Louise1; Heil, Petra2,3; Trebilco, Rowan3,4; Katsumata, Katsuro5; Constable, Andrew2,3; van Wijk, Esmee3,4; Assmann, Karen6; Beja, Joana7; Bricher, Phillippa1; Colemans, Richard3,8; Costa, Daniel9; Diggs, Steve10; Farneti, Riccardo11; Fawcett, Sarah12; Gille, Sarah T.10; Hendry, Katharine R.13; Henley, Sian14; Hofmann, Eileen15; Maksym, Ted16; MazIoff, Matthew10; Meijers, Andrew17; Meredith, Michael M.17; Moreau, Sebastian18; Ozsor, Burcu19; Robertson, Robin20; Schloss, Irene21,22,23; Schofield, Oscar24; Shi, Jiuxin25; Sikes, Elisabeth24; Smith, Inga J.26; Swart, Sebastiaan6,12; Wahlin, Anna6; Williams, Guy3,8; Williams, Michael J. M.27; Herraiz-Borreguero, Laura4,28; Kern, Stefan29; Liesers, Jan3,8; Massom, Robert A.2,3; Melbourne-Thomas, Jessica2,3,4; Miloslavich, Patricia8,30; Spreen, Gunnar31
通讯作者: Newman, Louise
刊名: FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
EISSN: 2296-7745
出版年: 2019
卷: 6
语种: 英语
英文关键词: Southern Ocean ; observations ; modeling ; ocean-climate interactions ; ecosystem-based management ; long-term monitoring ; international coordination
WOS关键词: ANTARCTIC SEA-ICE ; MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION ; MODELS HISTORICAL BIAS ; CIRCUMPOLAR DEEP-WATER ; BOTTOM WATER ; CLIMATE-CHANGE ; FOOD-WEB ; FRESH-WATER ; WEDDELL SEA ; ROSS SEA
WOS学科分类: Environmental Sciences ; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WOS研究方向: Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Marine & Freshwater Biology
英文摘要:

The Southern Ocean is disproportionately important in its effect on the Earth system, impacting climatic, biogeochemical, and ecological systems, which makes recent observed changes to this system cause for global concern. The enhanced understanding and improvements in predictive skill needed for understanding and projecting future states of the Southern Ocean require sustained observations. Over the last decade, the Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS) has established networks for enhancing regional coordination and research community groups to advance development of observing system capabilities. These networks support delivery of the SOOS 20-year vision, which is to develop a circumpolar system that ensures time series of key variables, and delivers the greatest impact from data to all key end-users. Although the Southern Ocean remains one of the least-observed ocean regions, enhanced international coordination and advances in autonomous platforms have resulted in progress toward sustained observations of this region. Since 2009, the Southern Ocean community has deployed over 5700 observational platforms south of 40 ffi S. Large-scale, multi-year or sustained, multidisciplinary efforts have been supported and are now delivering observations of essential variables at space and time scales that enable assessment of changes being observed in Southern Ocean systems. The improved observational coverage, however, is predominantly for the open ocean, encompasses the summer, consists of primarily physical oceanographic variables, and covers surface to 2000 m. Significant gaps remain in observations of the ice-impacted ocean, the sea ice, depths >2000 m, the air-ocean-ice interface, biogeochemical and biological variables, and for seasons other than summer. Addressing these data gaps in a sustained way requires parallel advances in coordination networks, cyberinfrastructure and data management tools, observational platform and sensor technology, two-way platform interrogation and data-transmission technologies, modeling frameworks, intercalibration experiments, and development of internationally agreed sampling standards and requirements of key variables. This paper presents a community statement on the major scientific and observational progress of the last decade, and importantly, an assessment of key priorities for the coming decade, toward achieving the SOOS vision and delivering essential data to all end-users.


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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/145275
Appears in Collections:全球变化的国际研究计划

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作者单位: 1.Univ Tasmania, Coll Sci & Engn, Inst Marine & Antarctic Studies, Southern Ocean Observing Syst Int Project Off, Hobart, Tas, Australia
2.Australian Antarctic Div, Kingston, Tas, Australia
3.Univ Tasmania, Antarctic Climate & Ecosyst Cooperat Res Ctr, Hobart, Tas, Australia
4.CSIRO, Oceans & Atmosphere, Hobart, ACT, Australia
5.Japan Agcy Marine Earth Sci & Technol, Res & Dev Ctr Global Change, Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan
6.Univ Gothenburg, Dept Marine Sci, Gothenburg, Sweden
7.British Oceanog Data Ctr, Liverpool, Merseyside, England
8.Univ Tasmania, Coll Sci & Engn, Inst Marine & Antarctic Studies, Hobart, Tas, Australia
9.Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA
10.Univ Calif San Diego, Scripps Inst Oceanog, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
11.Abdus Salam Int Ctr Theoret Phys, Earth Syst Phys Sect, Trieste, Italy
12.Univ Cape Town, Fac Sci, Dept Oceanog, Cape Town, South Africa
13.Univ Bristol, Sch Earth Sci, Bristol, Avon, England
14.Univ Edinburgh, Sch Geosci, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
15.Old Dominion Univ, Ctr Coastal Phys Oceanog, Norfolk, VA USA
16.Woods Hole Oceanog Inst, Woods Hole, MA 02543 USA
17.British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, England
18.Norwegian Polar Res Inst, Tromso, Norway
19.Istanbul Tech Univ, Polar Res Ctr, Istanbul, Turkey
20.Xiamen Univ Malaysia, China ASEAN Coll Marine Sci CAMS, Sepang, Malaysia
21.Inst Antartico Argentino, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
22.Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Ctr Austral Invest Cient CADIC, Ushuaia, Argentina
23.Univ Nacl Tierra del Fuego, Ushuaia, Argentina
24.Rutgers State Univ, Sch Environm & Biol Sci, Dept Marine & Coastal Sci, New Brunswick, NJ USA
25.Ocean Univ China, Key Lab Phys Oceanog, Qingdao, Shandong, Peoples R China
26.Univ Otago, Dept Phys, Dunedin, New Zealand
27.Natl Inst Water & Atmospher Res, Wellington, New Zealand
28.Ctr Southern Hemisphere Oceans Res, Hobart, Tas, Australia
29.Univ Hamburg, Integrated Climate Data, Ctr Earth Syst Res & Sustainabil, Hamburg, Germany
30.Univ Simon Bolivar, Dept Estudios Ambientales, Caracas, Venezuela
31.Univ Bremen, Inst Environm Phys, Bremen, Germany

Recommended Citation:
Newman, Louise,Heil, Petra,Trebilco, Rowan,et al. Delivering Sustained, Coordinated, and Integrated Observations of the Southern Ocean for Global Impact[J]. FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE,2019-01-01,6
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