Editorial – October 2010 – MyOcean Physical Systems in Regional Seas
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is devoted to some of the regional seas within the MyOcean project http://www.myocean.eu/ and to the numerical
systems that allows describing the ocean physics in those areas. A focus is here put on the Black Sea area, as well as on the Atlantic- Iberian
Biscay Irish- Ocean and the Atlantic- European North West Shelf- Ocean, with the description of new products that will be part of the MyOcean
catalogue from June 2011 on. Next January 2011 issue of the newsletter will also display papers about the Myocean project, focusing this time
on the ecosystem products in the Mediterranean Sea, the Arctic Ocean, the Black Sea as well as the Global Ocean.
In the present issue, Durand et al. are introducing this newsletter telling us about the Ferrybox data within MyOcean which are handled by the In-
Situ Thematic Assembly Centre (TAC). Environment sensor package onboard of ship-of-opportunity are referred to as Ferrybox system.
Ferrybox data products as temperature, salinity, oxygen and chlorophyll will be available from the MyOcean portal in near real time from June
2011. Delayed time products will be made available later on, around December 2011.
Scientific articles are then displayed as follows: First, Cailleau et al. are telling us about the numerical system that allows describing the ocean
physics in the MyOcean Atlantic- Iberian Biscay Irish- Ocean (referred to as the IBI area) from June 2011 on. Then, Demyshev et al. are talking
about the Black Sea MyOcean physics products used to investigate the Black Sea climatic changes. Results of the regional model improvement
and NEMO implementation in the Black Sea are also discussed. Finally, O’Dea et al. are presenting the next system for the Atlantic- European
North West Shelf- Ocean that will be part of the MyOcean catalogue from June 2011 on. A
The next January 2011 newsletter will also display papers about the Myocean project, focusing this time on the ecosystem products.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
Editorial – April 2011 – Special Issue jointly coordinated by Mercator Ocean and Coriolis
focusing on Ocean Observations
Greetings all,
Once a year in April, and for the second time after the April 2010 issue, the Mercator Ocean Forecasting Center in Toulouse and the Coriolis
Infrastructure in Brest publish a common newsletter. Some papers are dedicated to observations only, when others display collaborations
between the 2 aspects: Observations and Modelling/Data assimilation.
The two first papers introducing this issue are presenting the data requirement for the GMES Marine Core Service (Le Traon and Pouliquen) and
the Eurosites Open Ocean Observatory Network (Larkin et al.).
Then, Doxaran et al. are writing about the Provpanache project which uses of ProvBio floats to study the dynamics of suspended particles in river
plumes. Two papers are then dealing with eXpendable BathyThermograph (XBT) observations: Hamon et al. start with “Empirical correction of
XBT fall rate” and shows that maximum heat content in the top 700 meters found in earlier studies can be explained by now identified XBT
biases. XBT are also used by Maes et al. who look at the geostrophic component of oceanic jets entering in the eastern Coral Seas. Next, Brion
et al. are using complementary in situ data among which Thermosalinographs (TSG) for the calibration and validation of SMOS.
The two last papers of the present issue are displaying the collaboration between the Ocean Observations and Ocean Modelling communities:
Juza et al. are using a numerical model in order to determine how the Argo array could be extended to better monitor the Global Ocean heat
content variability. Drevillon et al. are then presenting the Mercator Ocean quaterly validation bulletin “Quo Va Dis?” which is using the Coriolis
data in order to draw the picture of the quality of the Mercator Ocean products.
We will meet again next year in April 2012 for a new jointly coordinated Newsletter between Mercator Ocean and Coriolis. Regarding next July
2011 Newsletter coordinated by Mercator Ocean only, it will display papers about the latest space missions and their use for oceanography and
research.
We wish you a pleasant reading,
Laurence Crosnier and Sylvie Pouliquen, Editors.
Editorial – October 2011 – Three of the MyOcean long time series reanalysis products
Greengs all,
This month’s newsleer is devoted to three of the MyOcean long me series Reanalysis products: the In Situ temperature and salinity CORA reanalysis
(1990 to 2010), the reanalysis of the North Atlanc ocean biogeochemistry (1998-2007) and the Arcc Ocean sea-ice dri/ reanalysis (1992-
2010).
The first product described here is the In Situ temperature and salinity CORA reanalysis (1990 to 2010). A new version of the comprehensive and
qualified ocean in-situ dataset (the Coriolis dataset for Re-Analysis - CORA) is released for the period 1990 to 2010. This in-situ dataset of temperature
and salinity profiles, from different data types (Argo, GTS data, VOS ships, NODC historical data...) on the global scale, is meant to be used for
general oceanographic research purposes, for ocean model validaon, and also for inializaon or assimilaon of ocean models. This product is
available from the MyOcean web portal (hp://www.myocean.eu/).
The second product is the reanalysis of the North Atlanc ocean biogeochemistry (1998-2007). A system assimilang Ocean Colour SeaWiFS data
during the period 1998-2007 has been designed to construct a reanalysis of the North Atlanc ocean biogeochemistry based on a coupled physicalbiogeochemical
model at eddy-admi:ng resoluon. The aim of this study is, on the one hand to develop the skeleton of a pre-operaonal coupled
physical-biogeochemical system with real-me assimilave/forecasng capability, and on the other hand to operate this prototype system for producing
a biogeochemical reanalysis covering the 1998-2007 period. This product is not available from the MyOcean web portal yet.
The third reanalysis product is the 1992-2010 winter Arcc Ocean sea ice dri/ me series made at Ifremer/CERSAT from satellite measurements
which consists of several products: the Level 3 products from single sensors and the L4 products from the combinaon of sensors. They are available
at 3, 6 and 30 day-lag with a 62.5 km-grid size during winter. This dataset is available for oceanic and climate modelling as well as various scienfic
studies in the Arcc. The me series is ongoing and will connue for Arcc long term monitoring using the next MetOp/ASCAT operaonal
scaerometers, planned to be operated for the next 10 years. This product is available from the MyOcean web portal (hp://www.myocean.eu/).
The next January 2012 issue will be dedicated to various applicaons using the Mercator Ocean products.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
This document summarizes three recent space missions - SMOS, GOCE, and CRYOSAT - and their applications to physical oceanography. SMOS measures sea surface salinity from space using an interferometric radiometer and has produced initial global salinity maps from SMOS observations, though accuracy goals have not yet been reached due to data processing challenges. GOCE measures Earth's gravity field and will help estimate ocean mean dynamic topography. CRYOSAT, though aimed at sea ice thickness, also provides altimeter data over oceans that can be combined with other altimeter missions.
This paper summarizes research comparing the simulation of ocean eddies in Mercator Ocean's 1/12 degree global ocean model to observations from altimetric data. The model is able to represent meso-scale eddy activity globally, capturing the main patterns of eddy kinetic energy. Specifically, the paper examines six key eddy formation regions and finds generally good agreement between the number of cyclonic and anticyclonic eddies simulated by the model and observed by satellites. The model performs particularly well in reproducing eddy statistics in the Leeuwing Current, Kuroshio, and Sargasso Sea.
Editorial – April 2010
Greetings all,
Over the past 10 years, Mercator Ocean and Coriolis have been working together both at French, European and international
level for the development of global ocean monitoring and forecasting capabilities. For the first time, this Newsletter is jointly
coordinated by Mercator Ocean and Coriolis teams. The first goal is to foster interactions between the french Mercator Ocean
Modelling/Data Asssimilation and Coriolis Observations communities, and to a larger extent, enhance communication at european
and international levels. The second objective is to broaden the themes of the scientific papers to Operational Oceanography in
general, hence reaching a wider audience within both Modelling/Data Asssimilation and Observations groups.
Once a year in April, Mercator Ocean and Coriolis will publish a common newsletter merging the Mercator Ocean Newsletter on
the one side and the Coriolis one on the other side. Mercator Ocean will still publish 3 other issues per year of its Newsletter in
July, October and January each year, more focused on Ocean Modeling and Data Assimilation aspects. The present issue will be
posted simultaneously on Mercator Ocean and Coriolis websites.
We will meet again next year in April 2011 for a new jointly coordinated Newsletter between Mercator Ocean and Coriolis.
Regarding next July 2010 Newsletter coordinated by Mercator Ocean only, it will display studies about coastal ocean systems.
We wish you a pleasant reading,
The Editorial Board
The MyOcean In Situ TAC collects in situ ocean observation data from various regional and global providers and performs quality control to integrate the data into homogeneous global and regional datasets. It focuses on core parameters like temperature, salinity, currents, sea level, and biogeochemical data. The TAC has global and regional components that are responsible for data acquisition, quality control, product assessment, and distribution. Over time, it has expanded its regional coverage and integrated additional parameters requested by EuroGOOS regional partners. The goal is to provide near-real time and historical data products to support ocean monitoring, forecasting, reanalysis and research activities.
Summary:
ICE ARC Project
ASSESSING CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON MARINE ECOSYSTEMS AND HUMAN ACTIVITIES
IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN: THE EUROPEAN ACCESS PROGRAMME (2011-2015)
THE YEAR OF POLAR PREDICTION (YOPP): CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
IN ICE-OCEAN FORECASTING
IAOOS (ICE - ATMOSPHERE - ARCTIC OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM, 2011-2019)
SEA ICE ANALYSIS AND FORECASTING WITH GLOSEA5
RECENT PROGRESS IN SEA ICE DATA ASSIMILATION AT ENVIRONMENT CANADA
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IMPACTING THE SEA ICE IN THE MERCATOR OCÉAN GLOBAL ¼° CONFIGURATION
PARAMETERIZATION OF DRAG COEFFICIENTS OVER POLAR SEA ICE FOR CLIMATE MODELS
A MAXWELL-ELASTO-BRITTLE RHEOLOGY FOR SEA ICE MODELING
Editorial – April 2011 – Special Issue jointly coordinated by Mercator Ocean and Coriolis
focusing on Ocean Observations
Greetings all,
Once a year in April, and for the second time after the April 2010 issue, the Mercator Ocean Forecasting Center in Toulouse and the Coriolis
Infrastructure in Brest publish a common newsletter. Some papers are dedicated to observations only, when others display collaborations
between the 2 aspects: Observations and Modelling/Data assimilation.
The two first papers introducing this issue are presenting the data requirement for the GMES Marine Core Service (Le Traon and Pouliquen) and
the Eurosites Open Ocean Observatory Network (Larkin et al.).
Then, Doxaran et al. are writing about the Provpanache project which uses of ProvBio floats to study the dynamics of suspended particles in river
plumes. Two papers are then dealing with eXpendable BathyThermograph (XBT) observations: Hamon et al. start with “Empirical correction of
XBT fall rate” and shows that maximum heat content in the top 700 meters found in earlier studies can be explained by now identified XBT
biases. XBT are also used by Maes et al. who look at the geostrophic component of oceanic jets entering in the eastern Coral Seas. Next, Brion
et al. are using complementary in situ data among which Thermosalinographs (TSG) for the calibration and validation of SMOS.
The two last papers of the present issue are displaying the collaboration between the Ocean Observations and Ocean Modelling communities:
Juza et al. are using a numerical model in order to determine how the Argo array could be extended to better monitor the Global Ocean heat
content variability. Drevillon et al. are then presenting the Mercator Ocean quaterly validation bulletin “Quo Va Dis?” which is using the Coriolis
data in order to draw the picture of the quality of the Mercator Ocean products.
We will meet again next year in April 2012 for a new jointly coordinated Newsletter between Mercator Ocean and Coriolis. Regarding next July
2011 Newsletter coordinated by Mercator Ocean only, it will display papers about the latest space missions and their use for oceanography and
research.
We wish you a pleasant reading,
Laurence Crosnier and Sylvie Pouliquen, Editors.
Editorial – October 2011 – Three of the MyOcean long time series reanalysis products
Greengs all,
This month’s newsleer is devoted to three of the MyOcean long me series Reanalysis products: the In Situ temperature and salinity CORA reanalysis
(1990 to 2010), the reanalysis of the North Atlanc ocean biogeochemistry (1998-2007) and the Arcc Ocean sea-ice dri/ reanalysis (1992-
2010).
The first product described here is the In Situ temperature and salinity CORA reanalysis (1990 to 2010). A new version of the comprehensive and
qualified ocean in-situ dataset (the Coriolis dataset for Re-Analysis - CORA) is released for the period 1990 to 2010. This in-situ dataset of temperature
and salinity profiles, from different data types (Argo, GTS data, VOS ships, NODC historical data...) on the global scale, is meant to be used for
general oceanographic research purposes, for ocean model validaon, and also for inializaon or assimilaon of ocean models. This product is
available from the MyOcean web portal (hp://www.myocean.eu/).
The second product is the reanalysis of the North Atlanc ocean biogeochemistry (1998-2007). A system assimilang Ocean Colour SeaWiFS data
during the period 1998-2007 has been designed to construct a reanalysis of the North Atlanc ocean biogeochemistry based on a coupled physicalbiogeochemical
model at eddy-admi:ng resoluon. The aim of this study is, on the one hand to develop the skeleton of a pre-operaonal coupled
physical-biogeochemical system with real-me assimilave/forecasng capability, and on the other hand to operate this prototype system for producing
a biogeochemical reanalysis covering the 1998-2007 period. This product is not available from the MyOcean web portal yet.
The third reanalysis product is the 1992-2010 winter Arcc Ocean sea ice dri/ me series made at Ifremer/CERSAT from satellite measurements
which consists of several products: the Level 3 products from single sensors and the L4 products from the combinaon of sensors. They are available
at 3, 6 and 30 day-lag with a 62.5 km-grid size during winter. This dataset is available for oceanic and climate modelling as well as various scienfic
studies in the Arcc. The me series is ongoing and will connue for Arcc long term monitoring using the next MetOp/ASCAT operaonal
scaerometers, planned to be operated for the next 10 years. This product is available from the MyOcean web portal (hp://www.myocean.eu/).
The next January 2012 issue will be dedicated to various applicaons using the Mercator Ocean products.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
This document summarizes three recent space missions - SMOS, GOCE, and CRYOSAT - and their applications to physical oceanography. SMOS measures sea surface salinity from space using an interferometric radiometer and has produced initial global salinity maps from SMOS observations, though accuracy goals have not yet been reached due to data processing challenges. GOCE measures Earth's gravity field and will help estimate ocean mean dynamic topography. CRYOSAT, though aimed at sea ice thickness, also provides altimeter data over oceans that can be combined with other altimeter missions.
This paper summarizes research comparing the simulation of ocean eddies in Mercator Ocean's 1/12 degree global ocean model to observations from altimetric data. The model is able to represent meso-scale eddy activity globally, capturing the main patterns of eddy kinetic energy. Specifically, the paper examines six key eddy formation regions and finds generally good agreement between the number of cyclonic and anticyclonic eddies simulated by the model and observed by satellites. The model performs particularly well in reproducing eddy statistics in the Leeuwing Current, Kuroshio, and Sargasso Sea.
Editorial – April 2010
Greetings all,
Over the past 10 years, Mercator Ocean and Coriolis have been working together both at French, European and international
level for the development of global ocean monitoring and forecasting capabilities. For the first time, this Newsletter is jointly
coordinated by Mercator Ocean and Coriolis teams. The first goal is to foster interactions between the french Mercator Ocean
Modelling/Data Asssimilation and Coriolis Observations communities, and to a larger extent, enhance communication at european
and international levels. The second objective is to broaden the themes of the scientific papers to Operational Oceanography in
general, hence reaching a wider audience within both Modelling/Data Asssimilation and Observations groups.
Once a year in April, Mercator Ocean and Coriolis will publish a common newsletter merging the Mercator Ocean Newsletter on
the one side and the Coriolis one on the other side. Mercator Ocean will still publish 3 other issues per year of its Newsletter in
July, October and January each year, more focused on Ocean Modeling and Data Assimilation aspects. The present issue will be
posted simultaneously on Mercator Ocean and Coriolis websites.
We will meet again next year in April 2011 for a new jointly coordinated Newsletter between Mercator Ocean and Coriolis.
Regarding next July 2010 Newsletter coordinated by Mercator Ocean only, it will display studies about coastal ocean systems.
We wish you a pleasant reading,
The Editorial Board
The MyOcean In Situ TAC collects in situ ocean observation data from various regional and global providers and performs quality control to integrate the data into homogeneous global and regional datasets. It focuses on core parameters like temperature, salinity, currents, sea level, and biogeochemical data. The TAC has global and regional components that are responsible for data acquisition, quality control, product assessment, and distribution. Over time, it has expanded its regional coverage and integrated additional parameters requested by EuroGOOS regional partners. The goal is to provide near-real time and historical data products to support ocean monitoring, forecasting, reanalysis and research activities.
Summary:
ICE ARC Project
ASSESSING CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON MARINE ECOSYSTEMS AND HUMAN ACTIVITIES
IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN: THE EUROPEAN ACCESS PROGRAMME (2011-2015)
THE YEAR OF POLAR PREDICTION (YOPP): CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
IN ICE-OCEAN FORECASTING
IAOOS (ICE - ATMOSPHERE - ARCTIC OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM, 2011-2019)
SEA ICE ANALYSIS AND FORECASTING WITH GLOSEA5
RECENT PROGRESS IN SEA ICE DATA ASSIMILATION AT ENVIRONMENT CANADA
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IMPACTING THE SEA ICE IN THE MERCATOR OCÉAN GLOBAL ¼° CONFIGURATION
PARAMETERIZATION OF DRAG COEFFICIENTS OVER POLAR SEA ICE FOR CLIMATE MODELS
A MAXWELL-ELASTO-BRITTLE RHEOLOGY FOR SEA ICE MODELING
Greetings all,
What does your imagination tell you when you think about the Austral Ocean ? Perhaps this place reminds you of the “Roaring
Forties” and the “Screaming fifties”, the drift of the icebergs, the only passage free of ice to go around the earth, an inhospitable
area, the Antarctic continent, penguins… Actually, the Austral Ocean is a keystone for the interocean exchanges of heat,
freshwater and anthropogenic tracers: it is the meeting point of the Indian, Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. It also plays a key role in
the global carbon cycle.
This issue is dedicated to this particular place. It will present to us some of the important oceanographic projects concerning the
Austral Ocean: Flostral, Survostral, GoodHope, the Drake Campaign and analysis done to better understand its dynamic and its
role from model (Drakkar project, …) and observations (ARGO, dedicated campaigns, satellite data sets, …).
The first article, written by Pouget & al., focuses on the performances of one of the global Mercator 1/4° model (PSY3v1) at
Drake Passage by comparing it with in situ data gathered from R.V Polarsten in 2006.
The second one, from Le Sommer & al., presents an overview of some results obtained on the Southern Ocean processes and
climate variability through the use of the Drakkar hierarchy of ocean/ice models.
The next one explains what the Survostral and Flostral projects are and it gathers some results deduced from the data collected
during these campaigns. Authors of this article are Salle JB and Morrow R.
The last one, written by Speich S. and Arhan M., presents the GoodHope project and summarizes some results of the work
done from the hydrographic data sets obtained in the scope of this project.
In this issue, we would also like to approach a central topic on the future of operational oceanography: MyOcean: part of the
GMES European Projet. This subject is introduced in the News pages by Pierre Bahurel.
I hope you enjoy this issue.
The document summarizes the ADRICOSM Pilot Project, which aimed to develop a near real-time operational marine monitoring and forecasting system for the Adriatic Sea. Key aspects of the project included collecting marine data through ships, satellites, and coastal stations; developing regional, shelf-scale, and coastal-scale hydrodynamic models; and integrating river basin and urban sewage runoff modeling. The goal was to demonstrate the feasibility of nested coastal current forecasts and integrate marine and watershed modeling for applications like managing sewage dispersal. The project involved institutions from Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, and France and was intended to support coastal management and environmental protection in the Adriatic Sea region.
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is devoted to Data Assimilation and its techniques and progress for operational oceanography.
Gary Brassington is first introducing this newsletter with a paper telling us about the international summer school for “observing,
assimilating and forecasting the ocean” which will be held in Perth, Western Australia in 11-22 January 2010
(http://www.bom.gov.au/bluelink/summerschool/). The course curriculum will include topics covering the leading edge science in
ocean observing systems, as well as the latest methods and techniques for analysis, data assimilation and ocean modeling.
Scientific articles about Data Assimilation are then displayed as follows: The first article by Broquet et al. is dealing with Ocean
state and surface forcing correction using the ROMS-IS4DVAR Data Assimilation System. Then, Cosme et al. are describing the
SEEK smoother as a Data Assimilation scheme for oceanic reanalyses. The next article by Brankart et al. is displaying a synthetic
literature review on the following subject: Is there a simple way of controlling the forcing function of the Ocean? Then Ferry et al.
are telling us about Ocean-Atmosphere flux correction by Ocean Data Assimilation. The last article by Oke et al. is dealing with
Data Assimilation in the Australian BlueLink System.
The next October 2009 newsletter will review the current work on ocean biology and biogeochemistry.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
Greetings all,
Once a year in April, the Mercator Ocean Forecasting Center in Toulouse and the Coriolis Infrastructure in Brest publish a common newsletter. Papers are dedicated to observations only.
• The first paper introducing this issue is presenting the Coriolis 2014-2020 framework which was renewed in 2014 in order to go on integrating in-situ ocean observation infrastructure for operational oceanography and ocean/climate research.
• Next paper by Poffa et al. describes how some Argo floats are deployed by the sailing community, through ship-based non-governmental organization or trans-oceanic races. It allows Argo floats to be deployed in poorly sampled areas where there is no regular shipping. Sailors got also involved in oceanographic science activities. An example of float deployment is given in the case of the Barcelona World Race.
• Next paper by Pouliquen et al. describes the EURO-ARGO ERIC infrastructure which is now officially set-up since May 2014. The objective of the Euro-Argo ERIC is to organize a long term European contribution to the international Argo array of profiling floats.
• Le Traon et al. are then presenting how the assessment of the impact of ARGO in Ocean models and satellite validation is conducted in the context of E-AIMS (Euro-Argo improvements for the GMES/Copernicus Marine Service) FP7 project. Observing System Evaluations and Observing System Simulation Experiments have been conducted to quantify the contribution of Argo to constrain global and regional monitoring and forecasting centers and validate satellite observations. Recommendations for the new phase of Argo are also elaborated.
• Kolodziejczyk et al. follow with the presentation of the complementarity of ARGO and SMOS Sea Surface Salinity (SSS) observations to help monitoring SSS variability from basin to meso scale. Using a 4-year time-series of SMOS SSS data and the global Argo array of in situ measurements, a statistical approach and an optimal interpolation method are used to characterize biases and reduce noises. Results are promising and show strong complementarity between SMOS and Argo data.
• Herbert et al. then describe Shipboard Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers (SADCP) observations which are carried out in the Tropical Atlantic during yearly cruises in the framework of the PIRATA program. The present note displays the SADCP data processing methodology applied for 8 PIRATA cruises by using CASCADE software.
• Cravatte et al. follow with a paper presenting the new international TPOS2020 project (2014-2020). The project objective is to build a renewed, integrated, internationally-coordinated and sustainable observing system in the Tropical Pacific, meeting both the needs of climate research and operational forecasting systems and learning lessons from the great success-and finally partial collapse- of the TAO/TRITON array.
• Saout-Grit et al. next present an updated procedure for CTD-oxygen calibration along with new
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is dedicated to regional and coastal oceanography. We review in this issue the impressive work
recently done towards regional to coastal modelling with nesting and open boundary procedures as well as imbrications of
models of increasing resolution and complexity. Moreover, regional and coastal systems have now reached an operational level
and are delivering real time forecast in various areas.
After an introduction by Obaton reminding us of the challenging European and French programs dealing with regional/coastal
oceanography, this issue displays six scientific articles. Chanut et al. are starting with a paper describing the Mercator Ocean
regional system embracing the French Atlantic coast with a 1/36° horizontal resolution. Marsaleix et a l. are then writing about
the North Western Mediterranean Sea system which is currently upgraded in the framework of the ECOOP program. Next paper
by Riflet et al. is dealing with operational ocean forecasting of the Portuguese waters using the Mercator Ocean North Atlantic
high resolution solution at its boundaries. Lecornu et al. are following with an article about the PREVIMER operational MARS
system in the Bay of Biscay. Marchesiello et al. are then describing the effort conducted at IRD in order to provide the
developing countries with tools for operational regional marine forecast. At last, Reffray et al. tell us how the MARS,
SYMPHONIE and NEMO/OPA systems intercompare over the Bay of Biscay during the year 2004.
We wish you a pleasant reading, and we will meet again in October 2008, with a newsletter dedicated to the international
GODAE project, which will hold its final meeting in Nice on November 12-15 2008 (http://www.godae.org/announcement-II.html).
Moreover, let us also remind you that our annual operational oceanography group meeting (Groupe Mission Mercator Coriolis,
GMMC) will take place on October 13 to 15 2008 in Toulouse (MétéoFrance site). We are looking forward to tell you about our
ongoing progress here at Mercator Ocean, and to hear about yours.
The PABIM project aims to develop and exploit biogeochemical observations from autonomous platforms like gliders and profiling floats. It seeks to provide a "user's manual" for these platforms and implement quality control of biogeochemical data collected. Autonomous platforms are being equipped with miniaturized biogeochemical sensors to measure variables like chlorophyll, oxygen, and nitrates continuously and in real-time. This allows constructing networks to provide the continuous data needed to initialize and validate ecosystem models. However, ensuring data accuracy over the long deployments of 1-2 years is challenging and requires sensor calibration and quality control methods.
The document summarizes Schmidt Ocean Institute's activities and accomplishments in 2018, highlighting innovations that are transforming marine science and conservation. Key points include: Saildrones were deployed ahead of an expedition to the "White Shark Café" to study the environment; artificial intelligence and machine learning tools were tested to support ocean research in real-time; and over 350,000 km were traveled supporting 11 research projects and engaging over 750 scientists. These developments illustrate how technology can accelerate and scale up ocean understanding and conservation.
Editorial – January 2011 – MyOcean Ecosystem Models
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is devoted to the MyOcean (http://www.myocean.eu/) numerical ecosystem models. A focus is here put on the Global
Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, the Black Sea as well as on the Arctic Ocean, with the description of products that are already or will be part of
the MyOcean catalogue either in July or December 2011 (http://operation.myocean.eu/web/24-catalogue.php).
Scientific articles are displayed as follows: First, Elmoussaoui et al. are describing the Mercator Ocean Global Ocean multi-nutrient and multiplankton
biogeochemical model PISCES that is embedded in the operational Mercator Ocean physical systems. Two simulations are carried
out in order to evaluate the impacts of physical data assimilation on modeled biogeochemical tracer distributions. Those simulations constitute
preliminary versions of the global ecosystem operational product that will be available in the MyOcean December 2011 catalogue. Then, Teruzzi
et al. are presenting the operational system for short-term forecast of the Mediterranean biogeochemistry implemented in the V0 version of
MyOcean project. Their coupled physical-biogeochemical model OPATM-BFM has been used for the operational simulations over a period
spanning more than 3 years. The third paper by Dorofeev et al. is displaying the Black Sea ecosystem model coupled with the basin dynamics,
improved within the MyOcean project. Long term evolution of the Black Sea ecosystem is studied and a regional bio-optical model is developed
to reproduce the variability of the water transparency based on sea colour observations. Finally, Samuelsen et al. are presenting the Arctic
Ocean ecosystem model that will be available from the MyOcean December 2011 catalogue. It consists of a coupling of the NORWegian
ECOlogical Model (NORWECOM) to the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) in the TOPAZ system. The variables that will be provided
are chlorophyll-a, diffuse attenuation coefficients, nitrate, phosphate, silicate, and oxygen.
The next April 2011 issue will be a special publication with a common newsletter between the Mercator Ocean Forecasting Center in Toulouse
and the Coriolis Infrastructure in Brest, more focused on observations.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
Mercator Ocean upgraded its ocean analysis and forecasting systems in 2010 to meet requirements for the GMES Marine service. A new 1/12 degree global system and 1/36 degree regional system for the northeast Atlantic were implemented. Product quality monitoring was improved through regular validation bulletins. A 17-year global ocean reanalysis at 1/4 degree resolution was also produced, incorporating more observations and model improvements. These system upgrades increased scientific performance and positioned Mercator Ocean as the coordinator of the MyOcean service.
Greetings all,
By the end of April 2008, the final meeting of the MERSEA European Project set up in Paris, in the Institut Océanographique.
The aim of the project was to develop a European system for operational monitoring and forecasting on global and regional scales
of the ocean physics, biogeochemistry and ecosystems.
It was surely a challenge to get together many different partners to build the future European operational oceanography of
tomorrow. It was also a challenge for the MERSEA teams to demonstrate their capacity to collect, validate and assimilate remote
sensed and in situ data into ocean circulation models, to interpolate in time and space for uniform coverage, to run nowcasting
(i.e. data synthesis in real-time), forecasting, and hind-casting, and to deliver information products. The project also had to
develop marine applications addressing the needs of both intermediate and end-users, whether institutional or from the private
sector
This Newsletter collects some of the many results obtained during this project. Several aspects are tackled: global and regional
forecasting systems, observations, and applications.
The News is written by the Coordinator of the Project, Yves Desaubies. He draws MERSEA results up.
In a first article, Marie Drévillon et al. present the MERSEA/Mercator-Ocean V2 global ocean analysis and forecasting system. In a
second one, Hervé Roquet et al. describe L3 and L4 high resolution SST products. The next article, written by Bruce Hackett et
al., focuses on Oil spill applications. The article of John Siddorn et al. closes the issue by a description of the development of a
North-East Atlantic tidal NEMO system.
Enjoy your reading!
DSD-NL 2014 - EU Data Landscape - 3. Jerico 2014 Gorringe_2Deltares
The document discusses operational oceanography data sources and infrastructure in Europe. It describes how data collection has evolved from individual communities collecting data independently for their own needs to a more coordinated, international approach. Key infrastructure discussed includes EMODnet Physics, MyOcean, SeaDataNet, and EuroGOOS regional operational systems. These work to provide integrated access to near real-time and historical ocean data from various platforms using common standards. The approach aims to maximize data sharing and reuse for applications like weather forecasting, climate monitoring, and fisheries management.
This bulletin gives an estimate of the accuracy of MERCATOR OCEAN’s analyses and forecast for the season of January-February-March 2011. It also provides a summary of useful information on the context of the production for this period. Diagnostics will be displayed for the global 1/12° (PSY4), global ¼° (PSY3) and the Atlantic and Mediterranean zoom at 1/12° (PSY2) monitoring and forecasting systems currently producing daily 3D temperature salinity and current products. In this fourth issue, we present a short validation study in the North West Pacific near Japan in the context of the catastrophe of March 2011. Finally we introduce the Mercator Ocean global ¼° reanalysis GLORYS2V1 products currently available via MyOcean V1 for the 1993- 2009 period, and more specifically the quality control of in situ profiles based on GLORYS2V1 innovations.
Greetings to all,
The Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE) final symposium will be held in Nice in November 12-15 2008. This
project has been a precursor to a world wide experiment to demonstrate the feasibility of global ocean observing systems using
state of the art assimilation techniques. Today, several teams are working on operational ocean systems to provide forecast and
description of the ocean, using increasingly complex assimilation schemes and high resolution models. As we saw in the last
newsletter, these systems have reached the coast and routinely provide real time ocean forecast. But they need input information
for their boundaries and initialisation fields, from regional, basin wide or global configurations.
This month, the Newsletter is dedicated to global ocean systems resulting from the GODAE project.
In the first news feature, a review of the GODAE achievements in ocean observing systems is made by Le Traon et al. In a
second introduction paper, Pierre Bahurel provides a “Global view on MyOcean” where he introduces the special ongoing efforts
to improve products and services to users.
Four systems from three countries (U.S., France and Japan) are then presented, showing a variety of developments, model
resolutions and assimilation schemes that are all facing the same challenges: to describe, understand and forecast the world
ocean. The first contribution is from Chassignet et Hurlburt and is dedicated to the U.S. HYCOM 1/12° global configuration.
Menemenlis et al. will then tell us how useful the ECCO2 system is in understanding and estimating ocean processes.
Legalloudec et al. follow with the 1/12° Mercator g lobal model and its ability to represent the mesoscale activity. Finally, Kamachi
et al. will present the MRI global systems, including two nesting configurations dedicated to several applications from climate
variability to boundary forcing or ocean weather.
The next newsletter will be published in January 2009 and dedicated to the Mediterranean Sea.
We wish you a pleasant reading.
Artificial intelligence, robotics, and new technologies were used to accelerate marine science and conservation in innovative ways in 2018. Unmanned saildrones surveyed the remote "White Shark Café" region ahead of an expedition to study why white sharks are drawn there. Researchers tested AI-based software to coordinate multiple robots surveying the ocean in real time. Large 3D maps of the seafloor were created using machine learning to analyze over a million photos. Experiments also tested AI enabling robots to autonomously survey the ocean for features like gas seeps without being explicitly programmed. These advances show how new technologies can transform ocean research and monitoring.
This document provides a summary of the accuracy of MERCATOR OCEAN's analyses and forecasts for the October-November-December 2010 period. It evaluates the global monitoring and forecasting systems, focusing on biases identified in surface layers of some regions. Modifications partially reduced biases in the Mediterranean Sea, while biases in other areas are still under investigation. The monitoring system matches altimetric observations well globally but has local biases that future updates aim to correct. Surface currents are underestimated compared to buoy measurements. Temperature and salinity forecasts show significant skill in many ocean regions from 0-500m depth.
Greetings all,
This issue of the Mercator Ocean Journal is dedicated to the
main outcomes of the MyOcean2 and Follow-On projects. The
EC/FP7 MyOcean2 and H2020 MyOcean Follow-On projects
covering the period from April 2012 to May 2015 have paved
the way to the current Copernicus Marine Environment
Monitoring Service (http://marine.copernicus.eu/).
Papers are dedicated to the following thematic:
Dorandeu as an introduction is presenting the objectives
and organization of the MyOcean2 and Follow-On projects.
Delamarche and Giordan are then describing the service
to users, what kind of service MyOcean delivers and how it
is being improved continuously.
Next paper by Crosnier et al. describes which products are
delivered to users and how the content of the catalogue has
been regularly updated with new and more scientifically
accurate products.
The following paper by Tonani et al. presents the seven
MFCs (Monitoring and Forecasting Centers) which provide
with ocean forecast, analysis and reanalysis products at
the global and regional scales. All these systems have been
able to increase the number and the quality of the products
during the MyOcean phases.
Simoncelli et al. follow with an overview of the principal
characteristics of the physical and biogeochemical regional
reanalysis. A standard validation methodology has been
defined and applied to all the reanalysis products to ensure
an adequate evaluation of their accuracy.
Hackett et al. are then presenting the satellite-based TACs
(Thematic Assembly Centers) which produce observations of
the Global Ocean and European regional seas: the Sea Level
TAC (sea surface elevation products), the Ocean Colour TAC
(optical products) and the Ocean and Sea Ice TAC (SST, sea ice and surface wind products).
Pouliquen et al. follow with an overview of the main achievements
of the InSitu TAC. The InSitu TAC is a distributed
service integrating InSitu data from different sources (e.g.
floats, buoys, gliders, ferrybox, drifters, SOOP) and carries
out quality control in a homogeneous manner. The goal of the
TACs in MyOcean was two-fold: 1) to provide assimilation and
validation data for the Monitoring and Forecasting Centres
(MFCs) and 2) to provide core observational products for a
broad range of downstream users.
Finally, the main achievements for NEMO ocean code evolution
are presented by the NEMO System Team. NEMO (Nucleus
for European Modelling of the Ocean) is a state-of-the-art
modelling framework used in a wide variety of applications
whose prime objectives are oceanographic research, operational
oceanography, seasonal to decadal forecasting and
climate studies. This paper will describe the NEMO development
processes, […]
DSD-NL 2014 - EU Data Landscape - 1. emo dnet jercio june 2014Deltares
The European Marine Observation and Data Network (EMODnet) aims to unlock fragmented marine data across Europe by making it freely accessible and interoperable. EMODnet brings together over 110 organizations to assemble marine data, metadata, and data products from diverse sources in a uniform way. The network produces data products of common interest like map layers and quality indicators to stimulate innovation, improve marine planning, and reduce uncertainty about sea conditions.
Dear Mercatorian,
By growing, Mercator resolutely turns towards users.
Such logical development, which comes also within the
wish of creation of the future operational centre, requires
more than ever to offer quality products which will well
reply to the downstream demand.
Correctly integrating observations in the assimilation
system and qualifying their impact stay one of the key
points to reach this objective.
The stake is double: to maintain/improve the operational
system performance, we need to consolidate the
present by demonstrating the importance of the ocean
data measurements: satellite, Argo floats, moorings and
others in situ measurement instruments, ... Furthermore,
it is necessary to prepare the future by testing new
assimilation methods, by estimating the future
observation systems relevance and by developing
strategy for their integration in the prototypes...
This Newsletter comes within this scope. The first article will describe the mean dynamic topography of the Mediterranean
Sea, as a reference required for altimetric data assimilation. Current and future topographies are described, assessed and
intercomparated in Mersea framework. The second article associates 4D-variational method and Argo drifting floats to
examine the potential we may expect of vertical profiles of temperature and salinity to produce the oceanic state. Finally, the
last article describes the Mercator strategy, developped in the scope of an ESA study, for the future surface salinity
observation system: SMOS.
Among all of this, don't forget Europe, par excellence topically question at these days and which is approached in the News
through the first annual Mersea meeting, held in Toulouse from March 29 to March 31st.
Have a good read and see you for next issue with regional and coastal oceanography topic!
This study examines the source rock potential of the Torquay Formation in southern
Saskatchewan using high resolution Rock-Eval pyrolysis and organic petrography on core samples.
The study finds that while two thin organic rich zones exist, the Torquay Formation has limited
source potential due to low total organic carbon values below 1 wt.%, hydrogen index below 250,
and low thermal maturity. The organic matter is Type II-III kerogen with some Type IV, suggesting
reworked or oxidized organic material rather than in-situ accumulation. This preliminary analysis
concludes the Torquay Formation has marginal source potential in southern Saskatchewan.
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is dedicated to Operational Oceanography around the world, with a focus on the European MERSEA
(http://www.mersea.eu.org/), the international GODAE (http://www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/ocean/GODAE/) programs as well as the
GMES (see Figure) (http://www.gmes.info/) initiative. Mercator Ocean is already fully involved in MERSEA as well as in GODAE
and GMES and will be one of the main actors of the Marine Core Service within the GMES project.
After an introduction by Desaubies reminding us of the challenges of the MERSEA project, this issue displays four articles giving
us a broad overview of what is done in the world of operational oceanography. We first start with an article illustrating how the
Mercator Ocean GMES Marine Core services are useful to downstream services such as Ocean climate monitoring, seasonal
prediction and support to offshore industry. We then follow with an article by our Australian colleagues (Brassington et al.)
involved in GODAE, describing their BlueLink operational oceanography system. Next article (Crosnier et al.) show how we
collaborate at the international GODAE level in order to inter-compare the forecasting systems, with an example of comparison of
the Mercator Ocean and BlueLink systems in the Indian Ocean. And last but not least article is written by our Canadian
colleagues (Davidson et al.) involved in the MERSEA and GODAE projects, describing their Canadian Ocean Forecasting
System. We wish you a pleasant reading and will meet again in April 2007, with a newsletter dedicated to impact studies.
The document showcases oceanographic products from the Met Office including surface ocean currents from November 14th 2020, significant wave height from a storm on December 27th 2020, surface chlorophyll concentration from March 2nd 2020, and sea surface height from January 1st 2021. These products visualize measurements and conditions of the physical, biological, and chemical properties of the ocean.
The document describes three Mediterranean Sea model products from the Copernicus Marine Environment Monitoring Service (CMEMS):
1) A physical model (MED-PHY) using a hydrodynamic model and data assimilation to provide daily sea level and circulation analyses and forecasts at 1/24 degree resolution with 141 vertical levels.
2) A biogeochemical model (MED-BIO) integrating satellite and in-situ observations with a biogeochemical model to provide chlorophyll analyses, reanalyses, and forecasts.
3) A wave model (MED-WAV) providing daily wave analyses and forecasts as well as hindcasts for the Mediterranean Sea.
Greetings all,
What does your imagination tell you when you think about the Austral Ocean ? Perhaps this place reminds you of the “Roaring
Forties” and the “Screaming fifties”, the drift of the icebergs, the only passage free of ice to go around the earth, an inhospitable
area, the Antarctic continent, penguins… Actually, the Austral Ocean is a keystone for the interocean exchanges of heat,
freshwater and anthropogenic tracers: it is the meeting point of the Indian, Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. It also plays a key role in
the global carbon cycle.
This issue is dedicated to this particular place. It will present to us some of the important oceanographic projects concerning the
Austral Ocean: Flostral, Survostral, GoodHope, the Drake Campaign and analysis done to better understand its dynamic and its
role from model (Drakkar project, …) and observations (ARGO, dedicated campaigns, satellite data sets, …).
The first article, written by Pouget & al., focuses on the performances of one of the global Mercator 1/4° model (PSY3v1) at
Drake Passage by comparing it with in situ data gathered from R.V Polarsten in 2006.
The second one, from Le Sommer & al., presents an overview of some results obtained on the Southern Ocean processes and
climate variability through the use of the Drakkar hierarchy of ocean/ice models.
The next one explains what the Survostral and Flostral projects are and it gathers some results deduced from the data collected
during these campaigns. Authors of this article are Salle JB and Morrow R.
The last one, written by Speich S. and Arhan M., presents the GoodHope project and summarizes some results of the work
done from the hydrographic data sets obtained in the scope of this project.
In this issue, we would also like to approach a central topic on the future of operational oceanography: MyOcean: part of the
GMES European Projet. This subject is introduced in the News pages by Pierre Bahurel.
I hope you enjoy this issue.
The document summarizes the ADRICOSM Pilot Project, which aimed to develop a near real-time operational marine monitoring and forecasting system for the Adriatic Sea. Key aspects of the project included collecting marine data through ships, satellites, and coastal stations; developing regional, shelf-scale, and coastal-scale hydrodynamic models; and integrating river basin and urban sewage runoff modeling. The goal was to demonstrate the feasibility of nested coastal current forecasts and integrate marine and watershed modeling for applications like managing sewage dispersal. The project involved institutions from Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, and France and was intended to support coastal management and environmental protection in the Adriatic Sea region.
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is devoted to Data Assimilation and its techniques and progress for operational oceanography.
Gary Brassington is first introducing this newsletter with a paper telling us about the international summer school for “observing,
assimilating and forecasting the ocean” which will be held in Perth, Western Australia in 11-22 January 2010
(http://www.bom.gov.au/bluelink/summerschool/). The course curriculum will include topics covering the leading edge science in
ocean observing systems, as well as the latest methods and techniques for analysis, data assimilation and ocean modeling.
Scientific articles about Data Assimilation are then displayed as follows: The first article by Broquet et al. is dealing with Ocean
state and surface forcing correction using the ROMS-IS4DVAR Data Assimilation System. Then, Cosme et al. are describing the
SEEK smoother as a Data Assimilation scheme for oceanic reanalyses. The next article by Brankart et al. is displaying a synthetic
literature review on the following subject: Is there a simple way of controlling the forcing function of the Ocean? Then Ferry et al.
are telling us about Ocean-Atmosphere flux correction by Ocean Data Assimilation. The last article by Oke et al. is dealing with
Data Assimilation in the Australian BlueLink System.
The next October 2009 newsletter will review the current work on ocean biology and biogeochemistry.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
Greetings all,
Once a year in April, the Mercator Ocean Forecasting Center in Toulouse and the Coriolis Infrastructure in Brest publish a common newsletter. Papers are dedicated to observations only.
• The first paper introducing this issue is presenting the Coriolis 2014-2020 framework which was renewed in 2014 in order to go on integrating in-situ ocean observation infrastructure for operational oceanography and ocean/climate research.
• Next paper by Poffa et al. describes how some Argo floats are deployed by the sailing community, through ship-based non-governmental organization or trans-oceanic races. It allows Argo floats to be deployed in poorly sampled areas where there is no regular shipping. Sailors got also involved in oceanographic science activities. An example of float deployment is given in the case of the Barcelona World Race.
• Next paper by Pouliquen et al. describes the EURO-ARGO ERIC infrastructure which is now officially set-up since May 2014. The objective of the Euro-Argo ERIC is to organize a long term European contribution to the international Argo array of profiling floats.
• Le Traon et al. are then presenting how the assessment of the impact of ARGO in Ocean models and satellite validation is conducted in the context of E-AIMS (Euro-Argo improvements for the GMES/Copernicus Marine Service) FP7 project. Observing System Evaluations and Observing System Simulation Experiments have been conducted to quantify the contribution of Argo to constrain global and regional monitoring and forecasting centers and validate satellite observations. Recommendations for the new phase of Argo are also elaborated.
• Kolodziejczyk et al. follow with the presentation of the complementarity of ARGO and SMOS Sea Surface Salinity (SSS) observations to help monitoring SSS variability from basin to meso scale. Using a 4-year time-series of SMOS SSS data and the global Argo array of in situ measurements, a statistical approach and an optimal interpolation method are used to characterize biases and reduce noises. Results are promising and show strong complementarity between SMOS and Argo data.
• Herbert et al. then describe Shipboard Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers (SADCP) observations which are carried out in the Tropical Atlantic during yearly cruises in the framework of the PIRATA program. The present note displays the SADCP data processing methodology applied for 8 PIRATA cruises by using CASCADE software.
• Cravatte et al. follow with a paper presenting the new international TPOS2020 project (2014-2020). The project objective is to build a renewed, integrated, internationally-coordinated and sustainable observing system in the Tropical Pacific, meeting both the needs of climate research and operational forecasting systems and learning lessons from the great success-and finally partial collapse- of the TAO/TRITON array.
• Saout-Grit et al. next present an updated procedure for CTD-oxygen calibration along with new
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is dedicated to regional and coastal oceanography. We review in this issue the impressive work
recently done towards regional to coastal modelling with nesting and open boundary procedures as well as imbrications of
models of increasing resolution and complexity. Moreover, regional and coastal systems have now reached an operational level
and are delivering real time forecast in various areas.
After an introduction by Obaton reminding us of the challenging European and French programs dealing with regional/coastal
oceanography, this issue displays six scientific articles. Chanut et al. are starting with a paper describing the Mercator Ocean
regional system embracing the French Atlantic coast with a 1/36° horizontal resolution. Marsaleix et a l. are then writing about
the North Western Mediterranean Sea system which is currently upgraded in the framework of the ECOOP program. Next paper
by Riflet et al. is dealing with operational ocean forecasting of the Portuguese waters using the Mercator Ocean North Atlantic
high resolution solution at its boundaries. Lecornu et al. are following with an article about the PREVIMER operational MARS
system in the Bay of Biscay. Marchesiello et al. are then describing the effort conducted at IRD in order to provide the
developing countries with tools for operational regional marine forecast. At last, Reffray et al. tell us how the MARS,
SYMPHONIE and NEMO/OPA systems intercompare over the Bay of Biscay during the year 2004.
We wish you a pleasant reading, and we will meet again in October 2008, with a newsletter dedicated to the international
GODAE project, which will hold its final meeting in Nice on November 12-15 2008 (http://www.godae.org/announcement-II.html).
Moreover, let us also remind you that our annual operational oceanography group meeting (Groupe Mission Mercator Coriolis,
GMMC) will take place on October 13 to 15 2008 in Toulouse (MétéoFrance site). We are looking forward to tell you about our
ongoing progress here at Mercator Ocean, and to hear about yours.
The PABIM project aims to develop and exploit biogeochemical observations from autonomous platforms like gliders and profiling floats. It seeks to provide a "user's manual" for these platforms and implement quality control of biogeochemical data collected. Autonomous platforms are being equipped with miniaturized biogeochemical sensors to measure variables like chlorophyll, oxygen, and nitrates continuously and in real-time. This allows constructing networks to provide the continuous data needed to initialize and validate ecosystem models. However, ensuring data accuracy over the long deployments of 1-2 years is challenging and requires sensor calibration and quality control methods.
The document summarizes Schmidt Ocean Institute's activities and accomplishments in 2018, highlighting innovations that are transforming marine science and conservation. Key points include: Saildrones were deployed ahead of an expedition to the "White Shark Café" to study the environment; artificial intelligence and machine learning tools were tested to support ocean research in real-time; and over 350,000 km were traveled supporting 11 research projects and engaging over 750 scientists. These developments illustrate how technology can accelerate and scale up ocean understanding and conservation.
Editorial – January 2011 – MyOcean Ecosystem Models
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is devoted to the MyOcean (http://www.myocean.eu/) numerical ecosystem models. A focus is here put on the Global
Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, the Black Sea as well as on the Arctic Ocean, with the description of products that are already or will be part of
the MyOcean catalogue either in July or December 2011 (http://operation.myocean.eu/web/24-catalogue.php).
Scientific articles are displayed as follows: First, Elmoussaoui et al. are describing the Mercator Ocean Global Ocean multi-nutrient and multiplankton
biogeochemical model PISCES that is embedded in the operational Mercator Ocean physical systems. Two simulations are carried
out in order to evaluate the impacts of physical data assimilation on modeled biogeochemical tracer distributions. Those simulations constitute
preliminary versions of the global ecosystem operational product that will be available in the MyOcean December 2011 catalogue. Then, Teruzzi
et al. are presenting the operational system for short-term forecast of the Mediterranean biogeochemistry implemented in the V0 version of
MyOcean project. Their coupled physical-biogeochemical model OPATM-BFM has been used for the operational simulations over a period
spanning more than 3 years. The third paper by Dorofeev et al. is displaying the Black Sea ecosystem model coupled with the basin dynamics,
improved within the MyOcean project. Long term evolution of the Black Sea ecosystem is studied and a regional bio-optical model is developed
to reproduce the variability of the water transparency based on sea colour observations. Finally, Samuelsen et al. are presenting the Arctic
Ocean ecosystem model that will be available from the MyOcean December 2011 catalogue. It consists of a coupling of the NORWegian
ECOlogical Model (NORWECOM) to the HYbrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) in the TOPAZ system. The variables that will be provided
are chlorophyll-a, diffuse attenuation coefficients, nitrate, phosphate, silicate, and oxygen.
The next April 2011 issue will be a special publication with a common newsletter between the Mercator Ocean Forecasting Center in Toulouse
and the Coriolis Infrastructure in Brest, more focused on observations.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
Mercator Ocean upgraded its ocean analysis and forecasting systems in 2010 to meet requirements for the GMES Marine service. A new 1/12 degree global system and 1/36 degree regional system for the northeast Atlantic were implemented. Product quality monitoring was improved through regular validation bulletins. A 17-year global ocean reanalysis at 1/4 degree resolution was also produced, incorporating more observations and model improvements. These system upgrades increased scientific performance and positioned Mercator Ocean as the coordinator of the MyOcean service.
Greetings all,
By the end of April 2008, the final meeting of the MERSEA European Project set up in Paris, in the Institut Océanographique.
The aim of the project was to develop a European system for operational monitoring and forecasting on global and regional scales
of the ocean physics, biogeochemistry and ecosystems.
It was surely a challenge to get together many different partners to build the future European operational oceanography of
tomorrow. It was also a challenge for the MERSEA teams to demonstrate their capacity to collect, validate and assimilate remote
sensed and in situ data into ocean circulation models, to interpolate in time and space for uniform coverage, to run nowcasting
(i.e. data synthesis in real-time), forecasting, and hind-casting, and to deliver information products. The project also had to
develop marine applications addressing the needs of both intermediate and end-users, whether institutional or from the private
sector
This Newsletter collects some of the many results obtained during this project. Several aspects are tackled: global and regional
forecasting systems, observations, and applications.
The News is written by the Coordinator of the Project, Yves Desaubies. He draws MERSEA results up.
In a first article, Marie Drévillon et al. present the MERSEA/Mercator-Ocean V2 global ocean analysis and forecasting system. In a
second one, Hervé Roquet et al. describe L3 and L4 high resolution SST products. The next article, written by Bruce Hackett et
al., focuses on Oil spill applications. The article of John Siddorn et al. closes the issue by a description of the development of a
North-East Atlantic tidal NEMO system.
Enjoy your reading!
DSD-NL 2014 - EU Data Landscape - 3. Jerico 2014 Gorringe_2Deltares
The document discusses operational oceanography data sources and infrastructure in Europe. It describes how data collection has evolved from individual communities collecting data independently for their own needs to a more coordinated, international approach. Key infrastructure discussed includes EMODnet Physics, MyOcean, SeaDataNet, and EuroGOOS regional operational systems. These work to provide integrated access to near real-time and historical ocean data from various platforms using common standards. The approach aims to maximize data sharing and reuse for applications like weather forecasting, climate monitoring, and fisheries management.
This bulletin gives an estimate of the accuracy of MERCATOR OCEAN’s analyses and forecast for the season of January-February-March 2011. It also provides a summary of useful information on the context of the production for this period. Diagnostics will be displayed for the global 1/12° (PSY4), global ¼° (PSY3) and the Atlantic and Mediterranean zoom at 1/12° (PSY2) monitoring and forecasting systems currently producing daily 3D temperature salinity and current products. In this fourth issue, we present a short validation study in the North West Pacific near Japan in the context of the catastrophe of March 2011. Finally we introduce the Mercator Ocean global ¼° reanalysis GLORYS2V1 products currently available via MyOcean V1 for the 1993- 2009 period, and more specifically the quality control of in situ profiles based on GLORYS2V1 innovations.
Greetings to all,
The Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE) final symposium will be held in Nice in November 12-15 2008. This
project has been a precursor to a world wide experiment to demonstrate the feasibility of global ocean observing systems using
state of the art assimilation techniques. Today, several teams are working on operational ocean systems to provide forecast and
description of the ocean, using increasingly complex assimilation schemes and high resolution models. As we saw in the last
newsletter, these systems have reached the coast and routinely provide real time ocean forecast. But they need input information
for their boundaries and initialisation fields, from regional, basin wide or global configurations.
This month, the Newsletter is dedicated to global ocean systems resulting from the GODAE project.
In the first news feature, a review of the GODAE achievements in ocean observing systems is made by Le Traon et al. In a
second introduction paper, Pierre Bahurel provides a “Global view on MyOcean” where he introduces the special ongoing efforts
to improve products and services to users.
Four systems from three countries (U.S., France and Japan) are then presented, showing a variety of developments, model
resolutions and assimilation schemes that are all facing the same challenges: to describe, understand and forecast the world
ocean. The first contribution is from Chassignet et Hurlburt and is dedicated to the U.S. HYCOM 1/12° global configuration.
Menemenlis et al. will then tell us how useful the ECCO2 system is in understanding and estimating ocean processes.
Legalloudec et al. follow with the 1/12° Mercator g lobal model and its ability to represent the mesoscale activity. Finally, Kamachi
et al. will present the MRI global systems, including two nesting configurations dedicated to several applications from climate
variability to boundary forcing or ocean weather.
The next newsletter will be published in January 2009 and dedicated to the Mediterranean Sea.
We wish you a pleasant reading.
Artificial intelligence, robotics, and new technologies were used to accelerate marine science and conservation in innovative ways in 2018. Unmanned saildrones surveyed the remote "White Shark Café" region ahead of an expedition to study why white sharks are drawn there. Researchers tested AI-based software to coordinate multiple robots surveying the ocean in real time. Large 3D maps of the seafloor were created using machine learning to analyze over a million photos. Experiments also tested AI enabling robots to autonomously survey the ocean for features like gas seeps without being explicitly programmed. These advances show how new technologies can transform ocean research and monitoring.
This document provides a summary of the accuracy of MERCATOR OCEAN's analyses and forecasts for the October-November-December 2010 period. It evaluates the global monitoring and forecasting systems, focusing on biases identified in surface layers of some regions. Modifications partially reduced biases in the Mediterranean Sea, while biases in other areas are still under investigation. The monitoring system matches altimetric observations well globally but has local biases that future updates aim to correct. Surface currents are underestimated compared to buoy measurements. Temperature and salinity forecasts show significant skill in many ocean regions from 0-500m depth.
Greetings all,
This issue of the Mercator Ocean Journal is dedicated to the
main outcomes of the MyOcean2 and Follow-On projects. The
EC/FP7 MyOcean2 and H2020 MyOcean Follow-On projects
covering the period from April 2012 to May 2015 have paved
the way to the current Copernicus Marine Environment
Monitoring Service (http://marine.copernicus.eu/).
Papers are dedicated to the following thematic:
Dorandeu as an introduction is presenting the objectives
and organization of the MyOcean2 and Follow-On projects.
Delamarche and Giordan are then describing the service
to users, what kind of service MyOcean delivers and how it
is being improved continuously.
Next paper by Crosnier et al. describes which products are
delivered to users and how the content of the catalogue has
been regularly updated with new and more scientifically
accurate products.
The following paper by Tonani et al. presents the seven
MFCs (Monitoring and Forecasting Centers) which provide
with ocean forecast, analysis and reanalysis products at
the global and regional scales. All these systems have been
able to increase the number and the quality of the products
during the MyOcean phases.
Simoncelli et al. follow with an overview of the principal
characteristics of the physical and biogeochemical regional
reanalysis. A standard validation methodology has been
defined and applied to all the reanalysis products to ensure
an adequate evaluation of their accuracy.
Hackett et al. are then presenting the satellite-based TACs
(Thematic Assembly Centers) which produce observations of
the Global Ocean and European regional seas: the Sea Level
TAC (sea surface elevation products), the Ocean Colour TAC
(optical products) and the Ocean and Sea Ice TAC (SST, sea ice and surface wind products).
Pouliquen et al. follow with an overview of the main achievements
of the InSitu TAC. The InSitu TAC is a distributed
service integrating InSitu data from different sources (e.g.
floats, buoys, gliders, ferrybox, drifters, SOOP) and carries
out quality control in a homogeneous manner. The goal of the
TACs in MyOcean was two-fold: 1) to provide assimilation and
validation data for the Monitoring and Forecasting Centres
(MFCs) and 2) to provide core observational products for a
broad range of downstream users.
Finally, the main achievements for NEMO ocean code evolution
are presented by the NEMO System Team. NEMO (Nucleus
for European Modelling of the Ocean) is a state-of-the-art
modelling framework used in a wide variety of applications
whose prime objectives are oceanographic research, operational
oceanography, seasonal to decadal forecasting and
climate studies. This paper will describe the NEMO development
processes, […]
DSD-NL 2014 - EU Data Landscape - 1. emo dnet jercio june 2014Deltares
The European Marine Observation and Data Network (EMODnet) aims to unlock fragmented marine data across Europe by making it freely accessible and interoperable. EMODnet brings together over 110 organizations to assemble marine data, metadata, and data products from diverse sources in a uniform way. The network produces data products of common interest like map layers and quality indicators to stimulate innovation, improve marine planning, and reduce uncertainty about sea conditions.
Dear Mercatorian,
By growing, Mercator resolutely turns towards users.
Such logical development, which comes also within the
wish of creation of the future operational centre, requires
more than ever to offer quality products which will well
reply to the downstream demand.
Correctly integrating observations in the assimilation
system and qualifying their impact stay one of the key
points to reach this objective.
The stake is double: to maintain/improve the operational
system performance, we need to consolidate the
present by demonstrating the importance of the ocean
data measurements: satellite, Argo floats, moorings and
others in situ measurement instruments, ... Furthermore,
it is necessary to prepare the future by testing new
assimilation methods, by estimating the future
observation systems relevance and by developing
strategy for their integration in the prototypes...
This Newsletter comes within this scope. The first article will describe the mean dynamic topography of the Mediterranean
Sea, as a reference required for altimetric data assimilation. Current and future topographies are described, assessed and
intercomparated in Mersea framework. The second article associates 4D-variational method and Argo drifting floats to
examine the potential we may expect of vertical profiles of temperature and salinity to produce the oceanic state. Finally, the
last article describes the Mercator strategy, developped in the scope of an ESA study, for the future surface salinity
observation system: SMOS.
Among all of this, don't forget Europe, par excellence topically question at these days and which is approached in the News
through the first annual Mersea meeting, held in Toulouse from March 29 to March 31st.
Have a good read and see you for next issue with regional and coastal oceanography topic!
This study examines the source rock potential of the Torquay Formation in southern
Saskatchewan using high resolution Rock-Eval pyrolysis and organic petrography on core samples.
The study finds that while two thin organic rich zones exist, the Torquay Formation has limited
source potential due to low total organic carbon values below 1 wt.%, hydrogen index below 250,
and low thermal maturity. The organic matter is Type II-III kerogen with some Type IV, suggesting
reworked or oxidized organic material rather than in-situ accumulation. This preliminary analysis
concludes the Torquay Formation has marginal source potential in southern Saskatchewan.
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is dedicated to Operational Oceanography around the world, with a focus on the European MERSEA
(http://www.mersea.eu.org/), the international GODAE (http://www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/ocean/GODAE/) programs as well as the
GMES (see Figure) (http://www.gmes.info/) initiative. Mercator Ocean is already fully involved in MERSEA as well as in GODAE
and GMES and will be one of the main actors of the Marine Core Service within the GMES project.
After an introduction by Desaubies reminding us of the challenges of the MERSEA project, this issue displays four articles giving
us a broad overview of what is done in the world of operational oceanography. We first start with an article illustrating how the
Mercator Ocean GMES Marine Core services are useful to downstream services such as Ocean climate monitoring, seasonal
prediction and support to offshore industry. We then follow with an article by our Australian colleagues (Brassington et al.)
involved in GODAE, describing their BlueLink operational oceanography system. Next article (Crosnier et al.) show how we
collaborate at the international GODAE level in order to inter-compare the forecasting systems, with an example of comparison of
the Mercator Ocean and BlueLink systems in the Indian Ocean. And last but not least article is written by our Canadian
colleagues (Davidson et al.) involved in the MERSEA and GODAE projects, describing their Canadian Ocean Forecasting
System. We wish you a pleasant reading and will meet again in April 2007, with a newsletter dedicated to impact studies.
The document showcases oceanographic products from the Met Office including surface ocean currents from November 14th 2020, significant wave height from a storm on December 27th 2020, surface chlorophyll concentration from March 2nd 2020, and sea surface height from January 1st 2021. These products visualize measurements and conditions of the physical, biological, and chemical properties of the ocean.
The document describes three Mediterranean Sea model products from the Copernicus Marine Environment Monitoring Service (CMEMS):
1) A physical model (MED-PHY) using a hydrodynamic model and data assimilation to provide daily sea level and circulation analyses and forecasts at 1/24 degree resolution with 141 vertical levels.
2) A biogeochemical model (MED-BIO) integrating satellite and in-situ observations with a biogeochemical model to provide chlorophyll analyses, reanalyses, and forecasts.
3) A wave model (MED-WAV) providing daily wave analyses and forecasts as well as hindcasts for the Mediterranean Sea.
This document describes several products from the Black Sea Monitoring and Forecasting Center (BS-MFC) team, including physical, biogeochemical, and wave models. The products include multi-year reanalysis datasets from 1993-2019 as well as near-real time analysis and forecasts beginning in 2018. The physical products are led by CMCC and IO-BAS, biogeochemical by ULiege, and waves by HZG and CMCC. The products provide essential ocean variables like temperature, salinity, currents, chlorophyll, and wave heights.
The document discusses operational biogeochemical modeling in the Arctic by TOPAZ, an ArcMFC forecasting system. It describes the current and future states of TOPAZ's operational forecasting system and biogeochemical reanalysis efforts. The current forecasting system has 12km resolution and forecasts for 10 days, while the future 2021 system will have 6km resolution and include carbon chemistry variables and runoff from Greenland. The current reanalysis covers 2007-2010 at 30km resolution, and future reanalyses aim to cover 2007-2017, assimilating more biogeochemical variables using EnKF and smoothing methods.
ZOOMBI is a project from 2018-2020 that developed formulations for zooplankton in marine biogeochemical models. The project aimed to improve representations of zooplankton-related processes like detritus sinking and ecosystem modeling. By modeling zooplankton more explicitly in space and time, the project found it could better estimate carbon export from surface waters into the ocean interior. The contact for the project is Ute Daewel from the Institute of Coastal Systems Analysis and Modeling at Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht.
This project used earth observation data from 2018-2020 to study near-coast ecosystems like sea grass and turbidity levels which are relevant to local users. The project contact is Steef Peters from Water Insight and the take home message is that earth observation is an attractive way to study coastal ecosystems for local stakeholders.
This document discusses the NEMO-FES project which optimized the simulation of barotropic tides and internal tide and wave drag dissipation in the NEMO v3.6 ocean model. The project was conducted from October 2018 to December 2020 by a consortium including LEGOS, CLS, and Mercator Ocean. The take-home message is that barotropic tide simulation was improved in NEMO 3.6 and a new constraint method shows promise, but more testing is needed to refine wave drag dissipation and account for under-ice cavities.
The WaveFlow project upgraded the open source version of the WAM wave model to include new physics that better represents wave-current interactions. Hindcast simulations were run using the upgraded model forced by ERA5 winds to provide new wave forcing datasets to the community. Comparisons showed the new physics improved the representation of wave spectra in the North Sea. The upgraded wave model had a small impact when incorporated into a coupled atmosphere-wave-ocean forecast system. The results of the project provide physically consistent wave forcing for ocean modeling and analysis.
The document describes two projects: BIOPTIMOD from 2018-2020 which involved developing a bio-optical model and using remote sensing reflectance to study radiative transfer; and MASSIMILI from 2015-2018 which used multi-platform data assimilation of BGC-Argo floats, ocean color, and a Mediterranean ecosystem model. It also provides names and affiliations of contacts for each project who are researchers at the National Institute of Oceanography and Applied Geophysics.
The document discusses a project called OPTIMA that ran from 2018-2019. The project aimed to simulate and assimilate satellite optical data on ocean plankton communities to improve simulations of underwater light conditions. This has potential benefits for biogeochemical and physical modeling of marine ecosystems. The contact for the project is Jozef Skakala from the Plymouth Marine Laboratory.
The document discusses the COMBAT project which runs from 2018-2020 and combines altimetry data, HF radar data, and modeling to develop new coastal ocean monitoring products for CMEMS. It introduces the project leads from AZTI, CLS Group, and LEGOS and their areas of expertise in HF radar, altimetry, and modeling, respectively. A key takeaway is that integrating these different data sources and simulations provides improved understanding of local ocean processes and a new coastal mean dynamic topography for more reliable monitoring of the study area.
This document discusses a project focused on developing high-resolution coastal modeling and forecasting tools to improve coastal zone management between 2018-2020. The project involves partners from Spain, Germany, and Denmark and is led by Agustin Sanchez-Arcilla from the Universitat Polità ̈cnica de Catalunya. The overall goal is to create seamless regional to coastal forecasting capabilities and tools to help manage water quality and coastal zones in an integrated manner.
The document discusses the LAMBDA project which aims to improve ocean models by better characterizing land-marine boundary conditions and river influences. It will do this through water continuum modelling, estuarine mixing studies, and remote observation of salinity. The project runs from 2018-2020 and involves full and associated partners led by project contact Francisco Campuzano from MASTEC-IST and CoLAB + ATLANTIC. The key takeaway message is that LAMBDA seeks to improve models of thermohaline circulation in coastal oceans through a better understanding of land-ocean boundaries.
The document discusses an ensemble generation scheme for ocean analysis systems that aims to provide uncertainty estimates of the ocean state. The scheme involves randomly perturbing both assimilated observations and surface forcing inputs to generate an ensemble of ocean state estimates. This allows the analysis system to account for uncertainties in observations and surface forcing when assessing the ocean state. The project developing this scheme is taking place from 2018 to 2020 at ECMWF.
This document provides information on the SCRUM 2 project which aims to improve coastal/regional ensemble consistency, reliability, and probabilistic forecasting through data assimilation. The project runs from 2018-2020 and is a collaboration between the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece and LEGOS in France. It seeks to contribute to CMES ensemble data assimilation by developing stochastic coastal/regional uncertainty modeling and probabilistic scoring. Vassilios Vervatis of the University of Athens is listed as the project contact.
The document discusses the High-resolution model Verification Evaluation (HiVE) project. The project aims to evaluate high-resolution ocean models through spatial verification methods. It analyzes forecasts of sea surface temperature and chlorophyll from April 2018 to March 2020. The project is led by Jan Maksymczuk and Marion Mittermaier of the Met Office in the UK, with support from Ric Crocker, Rachel North, and Christine Pequignet. The project demonstrates that higher resolution ocean forecasts, while more realistic looking, do not necessarily score better in quantitative verification compared to coarser models, similar to atmospheric forecasts. Spatial verification methods can help account for this difference by giving credit to forecasts that are correct nearby rather than
This document discusses a new eddy tracker product for the Copernicus Marine Environment Monitoring Service (CMEMS) that provides additional properties associated with 2D circulation forecasts from CMEMS models. It also discusses how intense mesoscale frontogenesis can induce submesoscale processes and significant vertical motion at oceanic fronts, recommending the diagnosis and forecast of vertical velocity be included in future CMEMS catalog updates. The project discussed occurred from 2016 to 2018 and was led by Simon Ruiz of IMEDEA (CSIC-UIB).
This document discusses a project from 2016-2018 to integrate coastal high-frequency radar data into the Copernicus Marine Service. The project contact is Julien Mader from AZTI who aims to pave the way for adding high-frequency radar data to the marine monitoring service to increase ocean observations.
This document provides examples of global and regional sea surface temperature (SST) data products. It lists near real-time and reprocessed foundation SST datasets at various spatial and temporal resolutions going back to the early 1980s. Upcoming hourly and sub-skin SST products are also mentioned. Specific examples of SST products are given for the Mediterranean/Black Seas, Baltic Sea, European Seas, and North West shelf/Iberia/Biscay/Irish Seas regions.
Trichogramma spp. is an efficient egg parasitoids that potentially assist to manage the insect-pests from the field condition by parasiting the host eggs. To mass culture this egg parasitoids effectively, we need to culture another stored grain pest- Rice Meal Moth (Corcyra Cephalonica). After rearing this pest, the eggs of Corcyra will carry the potential Trichogramma spp., which is an Hymenopteran Wasp. The detailed Methodologies of rearing both Corcyra Cephalonica and Trichogramma spp. have described on this ppt.
POPE FRANCIS 2ND ENCYCLICAL "Laudato Si" is the second encyclical of Pope Fra...AdelinePdelaCruz
"Laudato Si" is the second encyclical of Pope Francis, released on May 24, 2015. Its title comes from the opening words of the encyclical in Latin, which mean "Praise Be to You." The document focuses on the theme of care for our common home, urging humanity to take action to address environmental degradation, climate change, and social inequality. Pope Francis calls for an integral ecology that considers the interconnectedness of environmental, social, economic, and spiritual dimensions.
GFW Office Hours: How to Use Planet Imagery on Global Forest Watch_June 11, 2024Global Forest Watch
Earlier this year, we hosted a webinar on Deforestation Exposed: Using High Resolution Satellite Imagery to Investigate Forest Clearing.
If you missed this webinar or have any questions about Norway’s International Climate & Forests Initiative (NICFI) Satellite Data Program and Planet’s high-resolution mosaics, please join our expert-led office hours for an overview of how to use Planet’s satellite imagery on GFW, including how to access and analyze the data.
1. #39
QUARTERLY
Newsletter
The regional seas within the MyOcean project are the Arctic Ocean, the Baltic Sea, the Atlantic- European North West
Shelf- Ocean, the Atlantic- Iberian Biscay Irish- Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea. A focus is here put on
the Black Sea area, as well as on the Atlantic- Iberian Biscay Irish- Ocean and the Atlantic- European North West Shelf-
Ocean. Credits: webmaster@mercator-ocean.fr
Editorial – October 2010 – MyOcean Physical Systems in Regional Seas
Greetings all,
This month’s newsletter is devoted to some of the regional seas within the MyOcean project http://www.myocean.eu/ and to the numerical
systems that allows describing the ocean physics in those areas. A focus is here put on the Black Sea area, as well as on the Atlantic- Iberian
Biscay Irish- Ocean and the Atlantic- European North West Shelf- Ocean, with the description of new products that will be part of the MyOcean
catalogue from June 2011 on. Next January 2011 issue of the newsletter will also display papers about the Myocean project, focusing this time
on the ecosystem products in the Mediterranean Sea, the Arctic Ocean, the Black Sea as well as the Global Ocean.
In the present issue, Durand et al. are introducing this newsletter telling us about the Ferrybox data within MyOcean which are handled by the In-
Situ Thematic Assembly Centre (TAC). Environment sensor package onboard of ship-of-opportunity are referred to as Ferrybox system.
Ferrybox data products as temperature, salinity, oxygen and chlorophyll will be available from the MyOcean portal in near real time from June
2011. Delayed time products will be made available later on, around December 2011.
Scientific articles are then displayed as follows: First, Cailleau et al. are telling us about the numerical system that allows describing the ocean
physics in the MyOcean Atlantic- Iberian Biscay Irish- Ocean (referred to as the IBI area) from June 2011 on. Then, Demyshev et al. are talking
about the Black Sea MyOcean physics products used to investigate the Black Sea climatic changes. Results of the regional model improvement
and NEMO implementation in the Black Sea are also discussed. Finally, O’Dea et al. are presenting the next system for the Atlantic- European
North West Shelf- Ocean that will be part of the MyOcean catalogue from June 2011 on. A
The next January 2011 newsletter will also display papers about the Myocean project, focusing this time on the ecosystem products.
We wish you a pleasant reading!
2. Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 2
Mercator Ocean
Contents
The FERRYBOX component in MYOCEAN .........................................................................................................3
By Dominique Durand, Are Folkestad, Kai Sørensen
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area..........................5
By Sylvain Cailleau, Jérôme Chanut, Bruno Levier, Claire Maraldi, Guillaume Reffray
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view.................................................................................. 16
By Sergey Demyshev, Vasily Knysh, Gennady Korotaev, Alexander Kubryakov, Artem Mizyuk
NEMO-Shelf, towards operational oceanography with SST data assimilation on the North West European Shelf
....................................................................................................................................................................... 25
By Enda J. O’Dea, James While, Rachel Furner, Patrick Hyder, Alex Arnold, David Storkey, John R. Siddorn, Matthew Martin,
Hedong. Liu, James T. Holt
Notebook....................................................................................................................................................... 29
3. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 3
The FERRYBOX component in MYOCEAN
The FERRYBOX component in MYOCEAN
By Dominique Durand
1
, Are Folkestad
2
, Kai Sørensen
2
1
Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), Bergen, Norway
2
Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), Oslo, Norway
Ships of opportunity have been used for many years to observe the ocean and coastal seas and to complement monitoring
capabilities of the marine environment. In the last 10 years a rapid improvement of ocean observing systems has taken place, in
which observations from existing commercial ships such as ferries and cargo ships have raised increased interest. Nowadays
environment sensor package onboard of ship-of-opportunity are often referred to as Ferrybox system. The most advanced
Ferrybox integrate measurements of physical, chemical and biological parameters of the marine environment, and observations of
optical properties of the ocean and atmosphere. These systems enable to observe at high frequency, and along repetitive tracks,
the most important ocean parameters in surface waters, and to deliver them in quasi-real time to users.
MyOcean is the implementation project of the GMES Marine Core Service, aiming at deploying the first concerted and integrated
pan-European capacity for Ocean Monitoring and Forecasting. In this context, Ferrybox data present an important source of in-situ
data. Within MyOcean, a great effort is made to facilitate access to Ferrybox data as one of the key source of operational in-situ
data. Special attention is given to harmonization and quality control of data both in real time mode and in consolidated delayed
mode. Qualified Ferrybox data will contribute to validation of models and satellite observations.
At the present stage, several European
institutions deliver Ferrybox data
operationally to the MyOcean system,
encompassing physical (temperature
and salinity) and biochemical (e.g.
chlorophyll and oxygen) measurements.
However, MyOcean’s ambition is to
gather and deliver all Ferrybox data
available from all European waters
(Figure 1). Any institution performing
Ferrybox measurements are therefore
invited to deliver their data to MyOcean
and thereby contribute to this common
effort of providing the best possible data
network.
Ferrybox data within MyOcean are
handled by the In-Situ Thematic
Assembly Centre (TAC). The role of the
In-Situ TAC is to collect oceanographic
measurements from all possible
sources, and to calibrate, validate, edit,
archive and distribute them.
Figure 1 - Map of Ferrybox systems in
Europe operated by NIVA (NO), GKSS
(GER), IMR (NO), BCCR/UoB (NO),
NOCS (UK), POC (UK), Marlab/FRS
(UK), NIOZ (NL) SYKE (FIN), SMHI
(SWE), TTU (EST), LOMI (EST).The
ambition of MyOcean is to gather and
deliver all Ferrybox data available from
all European waters.
4. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 4
The FERRYBOX component in MYOCEAN
Ferrybox data originating from the various lines and operators are transferred to a common server where data are harmonized
with regards to data and metadata formats and standards. The approach followed in MyOcean is that data delivery should require
as little effort as possible for the data provider. Therefore the Ferrybox data provider is not required to perform any pre-processing
of the data, and the data and metadata can be provided in the format in which it is delivered by the Ferrybox system. Automatic
transfer of data can be set up either directly from the ship, from a local ftp server or from another centralized site (e.g. Oceansite).
All Ferrybox data delivered to MyOcean are imported to a common global database hosted by the Norwegian Institute for Water
Research (NIVA). Quality controlled data are thereafter exported in OceanSites NETCDF format and delivered to the central
MyOcean In Situ TAC database at Ifremer, within 24 hours after data acquisition. Ferrybox observations will thereby be made
available to the MyOcean Monitoring and Forecasting Centres for assimilation into models and for model validation. Data are also
made available to users of the marine core service under special agreements.
MyOcean is developing quality control procedure for real time data and consolidated assessment procedure for time series of
data. The procedures apply also to Ferrybox data, and necessary adjustments have been made to match the specificity of
Ferrybox systems. Real time quality control procedures are built on the heritage from previous efforts performed by e.g. the
ARGO, GOSUD, MERSEA, SeaDataNet, and PABIM projects. Data provided are then flagged following a simple 4-class quality
scale. Data products are also to be available in delayed mode, after having been screened by a more thorough examination with
regards to calibration, manual quality control and a check of the performance of the automatic flagging procedures.
In summary, the MyOcean project facilitates operational delivery of Ferrybox data from any vessel on a standard format and with
harmonised quality control system and flags. Furthermore, a common place for collection and distribution of Ferrybox data is of
high benefit for the whole marine community, including the data providers and the data users. Ferrybox data products
(temperature, salinity, oxygen and chlorophyll) will be available from the MyOcean portal in near real time from June 2011.
Delayed time products will be made available later on, around December 2011.
5. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 5
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian
Biscay Irish (IBI) area
By Sylvain Cailleau
1
, Jérôme Chanut
1
, Bruno Levier
1
, Claire Maraldi
2
, Guillaume Reffray
1
1
Mercator Ocean, Toulouse, France
2
LEGOS, Toulouse, France
Introduction
During the past years, in the framework of French project (Reffray et al. 2008) and European projects such as ECOOP (
www.ecoop.eu ), EASY ( www.project-easy.info ) and mainly now MyOcean ( http://www.myocean.eu.org ), Mercator Ocean has
developed its own regional system on the Iberian Biscay Irish area (henceforth called the IBI system). Outputs from the IBI system
will be distributed through the MyOcean data access portal from June 2011 on and provide an unprecedented high resolution
picture of ocean forecasts fields for the whole IBI area to end users for several applications such as fishery, search and rescue, oil
spill drifting, routing, research, education … among other. Secondly, this system will answer the increasing needs of partners who
deal with shelf and coastal ocean modelling. Their local systems will use as boundary and initial conditions the IBI system. The
quality of forecasts of these local systems also depends on the quality of their ocean forcings.
Robustness has been an essential driver in the design of the IBI operational system. To ensure service completeness and
timeliness, two identical systems will be operated redundantly by MyOcean IBI core partners (Puertos del Estado and Mercator
Ocean). The nominal system will be operated in Puertos del Estado (Spain) and the back-up one in Mercator Ocean. Thus if the
nominal system can not provide data in real time, the back-up one can take over. A strong collaboration between Mercator Ocean
and Puertos del Estado has been carried out in order Puertos del Estado to install and run the IBI system on their machine with
the same configuration as the Mercator Ocean one. For the MyOcean V1 stream2 version (June 2011), Puertos del Estado will
also replace the ESEOAT system used for Myocean V0 version on the IBI area by the new IBI system developed at Mercator
Ocean. Other partners involved in the IBI system in the framework of the MyOcean project are the Laboratoire d’Etudes en
Géophysique et Océanographie Spatiale (France) and the Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory (UK).
In conclusion, the new Mercator Ocean regional IBI system will complete all the other Mercator systems and will be the MyOcean
V1 stream2 system in the IBI area from June 2011 on. It will hence replace the Puertos del Estado ESEOAT system used during
the MyOcean V0 and V1 stream1 versions (from April 2009 untill June 2011). The upgrade of the IBI system for MyOcean V2 is
expected at the end of the MyOcean project early 2012.
This paper presents the IBI system developed at Mercator Ocean. A first part is dedicated to the description of the model
configuration including the latest coastal physics and new forcings, as well as the operational protocol based on an initialization
from the 1/12° resolution North Atlantic PSY2 Merca tor Ocean system. A second part concerns the validation which compares
system and observations and shows that the IBI system displays better scores than the ESEOAT system and better scores than
the North Atlantic Mercator Ocean systems (PSY2v3 and its release PSY2v4).
System description
Numerical setup
The numerical set up of the IBI forecasting system is based on the v2.3 NEMO/OPA9 Ocean General Circulation Model (Madec et
al. 1998; Madec 2008). The numerical core is very similar to other large scale forecasting systems in operation at Mercator
Océan, so that only important changes are described hereafter (ie: the main differences Table 1 - Model comparison between the
North Atlantic PSY2v3 and the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) Mercator Ocean systems are given in Table 1). These changes arised
from the need to improve the model physics on the shelf, since NEMO has been originally designed for the deep ocean. Proper
simulation of tidal waves implied the replacement of the default “filtered” free surface formulation (Roullet and Madec, 2000) by a
time-splitting procedure (implemented in the form proposed by Shchepetkin and McWilliams (2005)): the barotropic part of the
dynamical equations is integrated explicitly with a short time step while depth varying prognostic variables (baroclinic velocities
and tracers) that evolve more slowly are solved with a larger time step. This choice is indeed required to properly simulate tidal
waves without unrealistic damping (Levier et al. 2007). In addition, the default linear free surface approximation has been relaxed.
In practice the vertical coordinate is rescaled from the sea level height, becoming the so-called ‘z*’ coordinate as described by
Adcroft and Campin (2004). On a theoretical point of view, this is indeed required whenever the sea level variations are of the
6. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 6
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
order of the local water depth, which is often the case on the shelf due to the occurrence of large tidal amplitudes. This also adds
non linear feedbacks in dynamical equations that greatly enhance compound tidal waves and bottom stresses, thus improving the
representation of tidal waves in coastal regions.
Vertical mixing processes on the shelf are of primary importance, in particular because they dominate a large part of the water
column. This is mainly explained by tidal motions that maintain a significant level of turbulence by enhancing bottom stresses. This
induces bottom boundary layers over a large part of the water column, that eventually intersect surface boundary layers. River
plumes generation and their subsequent spreading, another fundamental physical process on the shelf, are largely controlled by
subtle mixing processes. Although simple and less costly one equation turbulence models (such as the default “TKE” closure used
in NEMO) have often been used with success on the shelf, two-equations models appear more adapted to the various processes
mentioned above. After extensive testing, the turbulence closure retained here is a k- ε version of the generic length scale (GLS)
formulation (Umlauf and Burchard, 2003) with the Canuto A stability functions (Canuto et al. 2001).
PSY2v3 IBI
Domain North Atlantic North East Atlantic
NEMO code version 1.09 2.3
Resolution 1/12° 1/36°
Time step 720 s 150 s
Vertical coordinate Z (50 levels) Z* (50 levels)
Free surface Explicit, filtered Split explicit
Vertical mixing 1.5 TKE closure
(Gaspar, 1990)
k-ε
(Umlauf and Burchard, 2003 )
Tracer horizontal advection TVD Quickest (Leonard, 1979)
Tides No Yes (including potential)
Short wave radiation penetration 2 bands scheme. Constant water type I 2 bands scheme. Variable
climatological PAR absorption depth.
Atmospheric forcing Daily ECMWF outputs 3h ECMWF outputs including
atmospheric pressure forcing
Open boundaries No (Buffer zones) Daily outputs from PSY2v3 system
Initial conditions Levitus climatology Output from PSY2v3
Table 1 - Model comparison between the North Atlantic PSY2v3 and the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) Mercator Ocean
systems.
7. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 7
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
Model configuration
The IBI model configuration covers the North East Atlantic ocean from the Canary Islands to Iceland. It encompasses the Western
Mediterranean Sea and the Skagerrak Strait that connects the Baltic Sea to the North Sea. The primitive equations are discretized
on a 1/36°(~2 km) curvilinear grid extracted from the global ORCA tripolar grid used by other Mercator systems. This makes the
chosen grid an exact refinement by a factor 3 of the North Atlantic system that provides initial and boundary conditions. The
reference vertical grid has the same 50 geopotential levels as other Mercator systems, with a resolution decreasing from ~1 m
near the surface to more than 400 m in the abyssal plain. A partial step representation of the bathymetry is used which improves
the model solution in the North Atlantic Ocean (Barnier et al. 2006). The bathymetry is derived from the 30 arc-second resolution
GEBCO 08 data set (Becker et al. 2009) merged with regional bathymetries provided by IFREMER, the French Navy (SHOM,
Service Hydrographique et Océanographique de la Marine) and the NOOS community (North West Shelf Operational
Oceanographic System, http://www.noos.cc) (work in collaboration with F. Lyard, LEGOS). Local grids cover the Mediterranean
Sea, the Gibraltar Strait, regions off Portugal and off North Spain, regions along the French coasts, the Southern Celtic Sea, part
of the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. The new bathymetry as well as GEBCO 08 were confronted to independent ICES
bathymetric data (http://www.ices.dk) to illustrate significant improvements in shelf sea regions.
Forcing
Meteorological fields from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) with a 3 hour and 0.25°x 0.25°
resolution are used to force the model. According to Bernie et al. (2005), this temporal resolution is enough to simulate diurnal
variations of Sea Surface Temperature. Wind stresses and heat surface fluxes are computed from CORE bulk formulae (Large
and Yeager, 2004) using a set of atmospheric variables that consists in air temperature, relative humidity, atmospheric pressure
and the wind components at 10 meters. Radiative heat fluxes, freshwater flux and atmospheric pressure are also used to force the
momentum and scalar equations. Short wave radiation penetrates the surface layer according to an extension law whose
extinction coefficient is dependent of the ocean color. This is necessary to correctly simulate the diurnal cycle in the surface
oceans (Dai and Trenberth, 2004). In the model we use a monthly ocean colour climatology based on SeaWiFS data. In addition
to atmospheric forcing, the model includes astronomical tidal forcing. It also includes river fresh inputs from a monthly runoff
climatology built by averaging data from the Global Runoff Data Center (http://grdc.bafg.de) and the French hydrographic
database “Banque Hydro” (http://hydro.eaufrance.fr). Finally, 35 major rivers are taken into account and applied at lateral open
boundaries over the model area.
Initial and open boundary conditions (temperature, salinity, velocity components and sea surface height) are originally derived
from the Mercator Ocean operational system over the North Atlantic at 1/12° (PSY2v3) (Hurlburt et al. 2009) solution and have
been recently switched to the new PSY2v4 system. The new PSY2v4 system is operated in real time since December 2010
(MyOcean V1stream1 version). The PSY2v4 system benefits from many enhancements: multivariate data assimilation with
incremental analysis updates method of bias correction, ECMWF 3-hourly forcings. In particular the incremental analysis update
of the assimilation scheme allows us to restart from an equilibrate state, which was not the case with the PSY2v3 system.
As both PSY2 systems do not include tidal forcing and atmospheric pressure forcing, these signals are added at the open
boundaries. Tidal open boundary data for 11 constituents (M2, S2, K2, N2, K1, O1, P1, Q1, M4, Mf, Mm) are provided according
the protocol described by Chanut et al. (2008). Elevations due to atmospheric pressure static effects, also known as inverse
barometer effects (Wunsch and Stammer, 1997) are computed from the ECMWF pressure fields.
Operational Protocol
The downscalling methodology used here and depicted in figure 1 is inherited from the strategy developed for the ESEOAT
system (Sotillo et al. 2007). Every week, the regional system is initialized in the past from analysed outputs (3d temperature,
salinity velocities and sea-level) taken from the PSY2 system and bilinearly interpolated on the refined grid. The model is then
integrated until D0 to allow the spin up of small scales and the convergence of physical processes that are not resolved by the
parent system. Impact on the forecasts results of the duration of this phase (typically a couple of weeks) is discussed in the next
sections. The analysed output at D0 is then used to provide one week forecasts until the next analysis stage. Note that in the
future operational context, the scenario will be somehow different: to account for the best available atmospheric forcing, a 5 days
forecast will be performed every day from D0 to D0+7.
8. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 8
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
Figure 1 - MyOcean V1stream2 (from June 2011 on) IBI system Operational protocol scheme
Results
In order to investigate the results of this operational protocol on the physics of the model, a three months simulation was
performed covering the spring 2009 period. Every week from the 1st April 2009 to the 17th
June 2009 (this period of time is 13
weeks long), the model was restarted from initial conditions provided by PSY2v3 for a five weeks period (PSY2v4 was not yet
available at the time of this study). Thus we obtained 13 runs of 5 weeks. Each run could be decomposed as a 1 week spin-up
and 4 weeks forecast, or 2 weeks spin-up and 3 weeks forecast, or 4 weeks spin-up and 1 week forecast. In that way, the period
May-June 2009 was simulated four times, from one week spin-up to four weeks spin-up. This allowed us to investigate the impact
of the spin-up period on the model results. The second part of the letter deals with the results of this simulation.
Most of the results of the IBI simulation presented here come from the simulation with 2 weeks spin-up (2WSP hereafter),
corresponding to the operational protocol. The IBI simulation is compared to the Puertos del Estado ESEOAT system and the
MERCATOR PSY2 systems (PSY2v3 the parent system and its release PSY2v4). The outputs of PSY2v4 were not available
when the spring 2009 simulation was performed, and they are just used in this paper as a comparative criterion. However, it is
important to keep in mind that IBI will be nested inside PSY2v4 for the V1 stream 2 version of the MyOcean project (from June
2011on).
Validation Protocol
We present here some diagnostics to evaluate the behavior of the model depending on the number of weeks of spin-up. We first
present an illustration of the consequence of the spin-up duration on the Sea Surface Temperature representation. Then we
assess the frontal positions from Iroise to Irish Sea, and the tidal currents in the Iroise Sea. The stratification over the Bay of
Biscay is investigated. Finally we compare the SST representation by the different systems, and also the residual currents at
buoys.
Figure 2 presents the RMS of the Sea Surface Temperature difference between high resolution satellite-based observations (L3
multi-sensor product from Météo France CMS center in Lannion, France) and the model, for (a) the IBI 1WSP (one week spin-up)
simulation and (b) the IBI 4WSP (four weeks spin-up ) simulation, for the period May-June 2009, for the Bay of Biscay and
Channel region. For the IBI 1WSP simulation, the largest errors occur in the Channel and along the shelf break, linked with the
tides dynamics, and north of the Galicia coast probably due to the initialization temperature field. The IBI 4WSP simulation exhibits
substantial error decrease in the Channel. The RMS error pattern north of Galicia has disappeared. The RMS error is also
reduced over the French shelf. On the other hand, the RMS error is slightly increased along the shelf break probably due to a lack
of internal tides mixing; it also increases close to the Landes coast. In some specific areas (in particular areas where the tides are
important), a long spin-up time allows us to reduce the RMS error. Figure 2c presents the RMS error evolution by regions and for
each IBI simulations (from 0 to 4 weeks spin-up). As expected, the RMS decreases strongly with the 1WSP simulation (except in
the Mediterranean Sea) thanks to the improved physics of the model compared to the parent model. Then the model drifts and the
RMS error tends to slightly increase (except in the Bay of Biscay region).
9. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 9
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
a) b) c)
Figure 2 - RMS (observation minus model) Sea Surface Temperature (SST) difference (°C) for the period May-June 2009
for (a) the 1 week spin-up IBI simulation and (b) the 4 weeks spin-up IBI simulation, for the Bay of Biscay and Channel
region. (c) Spatial average RMS (observation minus model) SST difference (°C) for the period May-June 2009 for the 0 to
4 weeks spin-up IBI simulations, for the IBI domain region (GLOB), the Iberic Peninsula region (IBER: 13°W-5°W, 34°N-
45°N), the North Sea region (NSEA: 12°W-14°E, 48°N -62°N) and the Mediterranean Sea region (MEDI: from Gibraltar strait
to 9°E).
Frontal positions
From the Sea Surface Temperature (SST) gradient we can simply estimate the positions of thermal fronts. In order to make a
direct comparison of model results with observations, we interpolate in space and time the model SST onto the observations grid.
We calculate then the temperature gradient along the x and y axis and sum their norms. Finally we map the maximum gradients
for the model and the observations, as seen in Figure 3 in the Channel and Celtic Sea region. These fronts are located at the
boundaries between stratified areas and mixed areas, where the tides interact with bathymetry. On June 24th
2009, the IBI 2WSP
simulation and satellite-based observations (L3 multi-sensor from Météo France CMS) show a very good agreement (Figure 3).
Almost all the main fronts are reproduced at the right position by the model, along the Brittany coast, across the Channel, or along
the Cornwall coast. The main discrepancy comes from the front crossing from Ireland to Whales: this front goes deep into the Irish
Sea in the IBI 2WSP simulation. This is not the case with the IBI 4WSP simulation (not shown), which indicates (as seen in the
previous paragraph) that for this area a longer spin-up period is necessary to correctly reproduce the tidal dynamics. The PSY2v3
simulation (Figure 3c) and PSY2v4 (not shown) which do not include the tidal forcing can not reproduce the fronts.
a) b) c)
Figure 3 - Sea Surface Temperature (°C) on 24 th
June with maximum horizontal gradients of SST overlaid for (a)
observation, (b) IBI and (c) PSY2v3.
10. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 10
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
Tidal currents validation: comparisons with HF radar
In order to validate the representation of tidal currents in the model, we use surface current data from the High Frequency WERA
(Wellen Radar) radars (Gurgel et al. 1999) at the Brezellec headland, 48°04N/4°40W, and at the Garchin e headland,
48°30N/4°46W (Figure 4). This system is operated by SHOM and provides radial surface currents every 20 minutes with a
resolution of 1.5 km and an accuracy of few centimeters per second (Le Boyer et al. 2009). The resulting radial currents have
been interpolated on a regular grid with a 2 km spatial resolution extending from 6°78W to 4°65W and f rom 47°30N to 49°26N
(Muller et al. 2009). Given intense tidal component dominating currents over the Iroise Sea, the 15 cm.s-1 uncertainty still allows
us to compute the tidal current components (Le Boyer et al. 2009). We used a 6 month dataset to perform the harmonic analysis
of 9 tidal components (M2, S2, K2, N2, K1, O1, P1, Q1 and M4). Comparisons with radar HF in the Iroise Sea allow us to
investigate the ability of the model to reproduce tidal surface ellipses in a region characterized by intense tidal currents. We use
the three months simulation of the IBI 2WSP to perform the harmonic analysis.
a) b)
Figure 4 - Modeled (black ellipses) and observed (red ellipses) tidal ellipses for (a) the M2 and (b) M4 components. The
background colour fields (in correspondence with the colour palette) represent the difference between the observed and
modeled semi major axis (cm/s). Observations come from coastal HF radar.
Figure 4a represents the observed and modelled tidal ellipses and the difference between the semi major axis (background fields)
for the M2 component. The tidal currents are globally well reproduced. The model semi-major axes are slightly overestimated
almost everywhere but with discrepancies depending on the location. The phase and inclination differences are higher on the
northern and eastern edges of the measurements areas. Discrepancies may results from both data quality and modeling.
Projection of radar HF velocities onto a Cartesian grid may increase errors due to the radar orientation. In addition, intersection of
beams at small angles may affect the precision of Cartesian components of the current vectors (Chapman et al. 1997; Sentchev et
al. 2009). The orthogonality of radar beams to dominant current direction may also decrease the data quality at far ranges
(Sentchev et al. 2009). Radar measurements accuracy is also limited in the vicinity of islands. Thus radar data may not be reliable
on edges and near islands which may explain errors over these areas. The M4 component is more difficult to be modeled but the
tidal currents are globally well reproduced (Figure 4b). They are generally underestimated and the major discrepancies are
located, as for M2, in the vicinity of islands.
Stratification over the Bay of Biscay shelf
We use the in-situ profiles measurements from the oceanographic cruise PELGAS 2009 (IFREMER; the data have been extracted
from data holdings at the SISMER data centre) accomplished in the Bay of Biscay in May 2009 for comparisons with IBI and
PSY2 models. The data are irregularly distributed in space and time and we used a collocalisation tool (adapted from Juza 2008)
to build modeled profiles at the same location and same day than observed profiles. Observed and modeled profiles are then
interpolated on a 3D grid for visualization. Figures 5 and 6 present the interpolated temperature and salinity fields for the
observations, the IBI model and the PSY2 models. Each profile’s date is different so the fields are not snapshots of a particular
11. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 11
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
day but for whole period of May 2009. The ship track goes from the South to the North. At the end of May, measurements were
made again in the South of the shelf (the results of this part of the cruise are presented in little window).
The observed thermal stratification shows two minima (Figure 5). One along the Aquitaine coast: the measurements were made in
this area at the Beginning of May when the thermal stratification is not yes established; surface waters in this area can also be
impacted by the Gironde plume. The other minimum is observed west of the Brittany coast, in the Ushant front; in this area, the
thermal stratification can not set up due to the strong tidal mixing. A maximum of thermal stratification is observed near 47°N,
2.5°W. At the end of May (small window on Figure 5) the thermal stratification is set up and difference between surface and
bottom can reach 5°C over the shelf. The IBI simula tion is closed to the observations: the minimum and maximum are well
reproduced. The thermal stratification is slightly over-estimated offshore the 200 m isobath. The PSY2v3 and PSY2v4 simulations,
which do not use the tidal forcing, do not reproduce the minimum of stratification in the Ushant front. The thermal stratification is
too weak for these two simulations.
The observed haline stratification (Figure 6) shows an along-shore gradient over the shelf with a maximum in the Gironde estuary,
a secondary maximum near the Loire estuary, and a minimum near Brittany. The difference between surface and bottom salinity is
negative all over the shelf until Brittany. This is due to the rivers plumes which spread over the shelf. In the southern part of the
shelf, the IBI simulation reproduces the haline stratification pattern, but the Gironde estuary maximum is under-estimated. The
positive difference near Brittany and offshore the 200 m isobath is not reproduced. However, the IBI simulation slightly improves
the results compared to the PSY2v3 one by which it was initialized. The PSY2v4 simulation reproduces well the north-south
gradient of haline stratification, but the maximum area is too close to the coast and not wide enough.
As a conclusion, the IBI system ability to reproduce haline stratification is reduced by its initial conditions. The thermal stratification
is well reproduced, despite problem in the Gironde plume near field due to a too strong mixing.
a) b) c) d)
Figure 5 - Surface minus near bed temperature difference (°C) for (a) observations, (b) IBI, (c) PSY2v 3 and (d) PSY2v4.
a) b) c) d)
Figure 6 - Same as Figure 5 but for salinity (psu).
Sea Surface Temperature
Figure 7 represents the difference of the Sea Surface Temperature between satellite-based observations (Météo France CMS L3
multi-sensor SST) and model outputs for the period May-June 2009. Compared to PSY2v3, the IBI 2WSP simulation reduces the
errors almost everywhere, except along the shelf slope and around the Cape St Vincent. Compare to the ESEOAT system, the
errors are reduced over the whole area. Table 2 gathers statistics calculated for the three models for different areas of the IBI
region for the same period; the IBI 2WSP simulation presents most of the best scores.
12. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 12
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
Difference (°C) Correlation RMS error (°C)
IBI PSY2v3/v4 ESEOAT IBI PSY2v3/v4 ESEOAT IBI PSY2v3/v4 ESEOAT
BOBI -0.03 0.30/0.30 0.52 0.43/0.44 0.63 0.73/0.73
CANA -0.08 0.05/0.09 0.64 0.52/0.66 0.59 0.55/0.55
ESEO -0.07 0.25/0.13 -0.35 0.55 0.49/0.51 0.47 0.61 0.65/0.60 0.73
IBER -0.08 0.19/0.08 -0.47 0.53 0.47/0.48 0.45 0.65 0.67/0.61 0.78
ISHF -0.19 .03/-0.02 -0.50 0.48 0.44/0.48 0.42 0.89 0.84/0.77 1.10
MEDI -0.11 -.04/-.37 0.65 0.65/0.54 0.69 0.66/0.85
NSEA -0.11 0.23/0.43 0.70 0.64/0.62 0.60 0.73/0.84
GLOB -0.07 0.16/0.09 0.59 0.53/0.53 0.58 0.62/0.64
Table 2 – Spatial average (observation minus model) Sea Surface Temperature difference (°C) (left), co rrelation (middle)
and RMS (observation minus model) SST error (°C) ( right) for the period May-June 2009 in the Bay of Biscay region
(BOBI: 11°W-3°E, 43°N-51°N), the Canary Islands reg ion (CANA: 21°W-8°W, 25°N-33°N), the ESEOAT region (ESEO: 14°W-
0°E, 33°N-47°N), the Iberic Peninsula region (IBER: 13°W-5°W, 34°N-45°N), the Iberic Peninsula shelf r egion (ISHF: IBER
region over the shelf), the Mediterranean Sea region (MEDI: from Gibraltar strait to 9°E), the North S ea region (NSEA:
12°W-14°E, 48°N-62°N) and the IBI domain region (GL OB). Best scores are in bold. We subtracted the linear trend of the
time series before calculating the correlations.
a) b) c) d)
Figure 7 - Sea Surface Temperature difference (°C) for the period May-June 2009 for (a) PSY2V3, (b) PSY2V4, (c) IBI and
(d) ESEOAT. Observations come from CMS L3S SST. The Mediterranean Sea is masked. ESEOAT model does not cover
the region north of 48°N.
Residual currents
We compare observed currents measurement time series from the Puertos del Estado deep sea network (http://www.puertos.es)
with currents from the models outputs. Buoys considered hereafter are located around the north-west Spanish coasts: Cabo
Silleiro (9.39°W, 42.13°N), Villano-Sisargas (9.21° W, 43.5°N), Estaca de Bares (7.62°W, 44.06°N), Cabo de Penas (6.17°W,
43.74°N). In order to remove the tidal signal from the current time series, we perform an harmonic analysis on ESEOAT and IBI,
but not on the PSY2 systems which do not include the tidal forcing and which outputs are daily averaged. Figure 8 represents the
zonal and meridional components of the near surface residual current (hourly measurements, one-day filtered and smoothed) at
(a) the Cabo Silleiro and (b) Estaca de Bares buoys. The Cabo Silleiro buoy is located on the west Spanish coast (north of
Portugal boundary) above the continental slope (above the 600 m isobath) which is oriented north-south, so the meridional
component is equivalent to the along-shore component, and the zonal component is equivalent to the cross-shore component.
This is the contrary for the Estaca de Bares buoy which is located north of Cap Ortegal above the continental slope (above the
400 m isobath). During the May 2009 period, both IBI and ESEOAT systems are well correlated with observed measurements,
especially for the cross-shore component. The along-shore component is over-estimated by ESEOAT while IBI under-estimates it.
Table 3 presents the RMS error for the zonal and meridional components of the current at different locations. The RMS error is
calculated with ESEOAT and IBI hourly currents and PSY2V3 and PSY2V4 daily currents. Detrended correlations are presented
in table 4. ESEOAT and IBI show similar results, the RMS of ESEOAT is smaller and correlation values are close.
13. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 13
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
a) b)
Figure 8 - Time series of zonal (top) and meridional (bottom) components of the current (m/s) at 3 meter depth for the
period May-June 2009 at (a) Cabo Silleiro buoy and (b) Estaca de Bares buoy. Observation is in black, ESEOAT in red, IBI
in blue and PSY2V3 in green.
ESEOAT IBI PSY2V3 PSY2V4
Cabo Penas 7/6 7/7 18/9 12/8
Cabo Silleiro 5/7 5/9 8/10 5/8
Estaca bares 9/5 9/5 22/10 12/5
Villano Sisargas 6/9 11/9 14/9 11/7
Table 3 - RMS difference observation-model (cm/s) for zonal/meridional component of currents at 3 meter depth for the
period May-June 2009 at different buoys. Statistics for ESEOAT and IBI are calculated with 1 day filtered residual
currents. Statistics for PSY2v2 and PSY2V4 are calculated with daily averaged currents.
ESEOAT IBI PSY2V3 PSY2V4
Cabo Penas 66/0 73/8 54/-31 59/-4
Cabo Silleiro 64/40 67/39 56/67 68/32
Estaca Bares 44/63 52/72 69/24 68/57
Villano Sisargas 62/26 40/40 49/25 54/67
Table 4 - Same as table 3 but with correlations.
Conclusion
In a first part, this paper has presented the description of the new Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) Mercator system which has been
chosen as next version of IBI MyOcean system. A strong effort of development has been carried out to add further coastal physics
in the ocean code NEMO usually used for larger model configuration. Now 11 tidal components can be taken into account thanks
to a new non-linear free surface, the time splitting which permits to separate high frequency barotropic signals and baroclinic
signals, and new formulations of open boundary conditions. The K-epsilon turbulent scheme has improved the vertical mixing too.
High frequency 3-hourly atmospheric fluxes have been used to force surface model. And a special hand made merged bathymetry
has been generated from different regional data basis. The 1/36° horizontal resolution has allowed the model to resolve
mesoscale and sub-mesoscale structures and specially improve the representation of local front areas. For the operational
scenario, the system is initialized by the Mercator North Atlantic system PSY2. All these developments have allowed the model to
adapt itself to coastal dynamics.
In a second part, this paper has shown the validation of the IBI system against data and other systems: ESEOAT from Puertos del
Estado (i.e the MyOcean V0 and V1stream1 version of IBI system from April 2009 untill June 2011), and PSY2, the system used
14. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 14
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
to initialize and force to the open boundaries the new IBI system. A comparison between observed and system (initialized with 0 to
4 weeks spinup) SST has shown a strong decrease in RMS during the first week due to better regional physics in the IBI system
against PSY2. In the end, a 2 weeks spinup has been finally chosen for the operational protocol. Besides, a better representation
of frontal zones in the IBI system is showing the impact of tide in the model. The Ushant thermal front is particularly well
represented in the IBI system against radar data. The same conclusion can be drawn for corresponding tidal ellipses.
A use of in-situ data (PELGAS 2009) has allowed validating the stratification on the Biscay shelf. The thermal stratification of the
IBI system corresponds to data, whereas the haline stratification is further away from observations probably because the IBI
system is too influenced by initialization of PSY2. The use of climatological monthly runoffs could also play a role. About SST
statistics (RMS and correlations) by subregions, The IBI system has shown globally the best results against ESEOAT and PSY2.
Regarding dynamics, the IBI system currents are better than in PSY2 but close to ESEOAT.
This new system is now almost ready to become the V1 stream2 version for MyOcean and should better answer the need of
coastal modellers (in term of initial and boundary conditions). Following the first conclusions from the validation and in order to
improve the system for the V2 version for MyOcean next year, several upgrades have been planned:
- MetNO (Norway) can provide to Mercator new wind stress which takes into account more wave components than the stress from
ECMWF presently used. As a result a more realistic vertical mixing should be reached.
- New daily runoffs from a data base used by PREVIMER and real time runoffs modelled by HYPE (from SMHI, Sweden) and/or
ISBA (from MétéoFrance) hydrological models should improve the haline stratification on shelves.
- Another operational scenario with a decreasing influence of PSY2 initial condition on shelves should improve the solution in
these areas since IBI system physics is more adapted.
- A part of the large scale SST bias seems to be triggered by large scale radiation fluxes bias. So a correction of ECMWF fluxes
with CMS satellite fluxes should reduce this bias.
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Shchepetkin A., McWilliams J., 2005. The regional oceanic modeling system (ROMS): a split-explicit, free-surface, topography-
following-coordinate oceanic model. Ocean Modelling, 2005, Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages 347-404.
Sotillo, M.G., Jordi, A., Ferrer, M.I., Conde, J., Tintoré, J., Álvarez-Fanjul, E., 2007. The ESEOO Regional Ocean Forecasting
System. Proceedings of the seventeenth (2007) International Offshore And Polar Engineering Conference, Vol 1 – 4, 1716 –
1722.
Umlauf L., Burchard H., 2003. A generic length-scale equation for geophysical turbulence models, Journal of Marine Research,
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Wunsch C., Stammer D., 1997. Atmospheric loading and the oceanic “inverse barometer” effect. Reviews of Geophysics, 35(1),
79-107.
16. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 16
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
By Sergey Demyshev
1
, Vasily Knysh
1
, Gennady Korotaev
1
, Alexander Kubryakov
1
, Artem
Mizyuk
1
1
Marine Hydrophysical Institute, Sevastopol, Ukraine
Abstract
The Black Sea MyOcean products are studied in this paper in order to investigate climatic changes. Results of the regional model
improvement and NEMO implementation in the Black Sea are also discussed.
The role of the MyOcean project for the Black Sea oceanography
The Black Sea is a semi-enclosed basin of the oceanic type with simple configuration and a depth up to 2 km. Observations of the
Black Sea started at the end of 19th century. Hydrographic observations covered the basin area more or less uniformly in all
seasons between the end of fifties and mid of 1990-ies. Also were collected lots of interdisciplinary data concerning the Black Sea
biogeochemistry. Collapse of the Soviet Union has resulted in collapse of the Black Sea observing system. A new cost efficient
observing system is built by consolidated efforts of riparian countries in the framework of the Black Sea GOOS project. It is mainly
based on remote sensing, tide gauges and free drifting buoys data but includes also observation from platforms and vessels
surveys near the shore.
The development of operational forecasting system in the basin started in 2003 in the framework of the FP5 ARENA project. The
pilot system of the Black Sea forecasting was built and tested under the aegis of the project in summer 2005. Then its improved
version served as a support for coastal forecasting in the framework of FP6 ECOOP project. The MyOcean project which started
in 2009 plays a significant role for the development of the Black Sea operational oceanography. Regular high quality products
which are based on the processing of the Earth remote sensing data permit to consider evolution of SSH, SST and sea colour
fields with high resolution. New insight to the Black Sea dynamics and ecosystem is provided by the MyOcean project. The Black
Sea nowcasting and forecasting products are already available from the MyOcean catalogue (http://catalogue.myocean.eu.org).
The Black Sea reanalysis products which will be available from the MyOcean catalogue in June 2011 are partially presented in
this paper.
Thus MyOcean provides a set of new regional products which make possible to consider the Black Sea basin as a whole.
Particularly, Reanalysis of the Black Sea dynamics provides a powerful tool for the investigation of the climatic changes in the
basin and their influence on the marine ecosystem. Semi-enclosed nature of the basin provides good opportunity for the different
component budget estimations. New operational products provide another important contribution to the process studies in the
basin including multidisciplinary investigations. The study of small-scale phenomena or biogeochemical processes is possible now
under controlled background dynamics.
MyOcean is a user driven project. It means that the quality of the MyOcean products should satisfy user requirements. End –user
demands in the framework of MyOcean are translated to the research community requests for the improvement of operational
oceanography tools.
The Black Sea has a simple coast line and its hydrography is typical for the oceanic basin. Many observations have been
collected during more than century which makes possible providing assessment of efficiency of different models and assimilation
schemes. Therefore MyOcean has an opportunity to consider the Black Sea basin as a natural laboratory for the model
development and improvement.
Thus, the MyOcean project opens new field for the scientific problem formulation and for new knowledge in the region. This paper
presents scientific development of the Black Sea Monitoring and Forecasting Center (MFC). Its first part presents the Black Sea
dynamic reanalysis for 1971 – 1993 obtained by means of assimilation of archive hydrography in the Princeton Ocean model.
Then, in the second part of this paper, we present assessment of the improved version of circulation model which will be used for
operational nowcast and forecast starting June 2011. Comparison results of two numerical simulations with observations
demonstrate the model skill for reproduction of the upper layer thermodynamics and structure of the permanent pycnocline.
Finally, the third part of the paper presents the transition occurring within MyOcean towards the use of the NEMO code to simulate
the Black Sea circulation.
17. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 17
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
Part 1 : MyOcean Black Sea contribution to investigation of the long-term basin
evolution - Reanalysis of the Black Sea dynamics for the study of climatic
changes
A Reanalysis simulation of the Black Sea dynamics covering the time period 1971-1993 on a grid with resolution 8.1 km in zonal
and 6.95 km in meridional directions and 26 σ -surfaces has been carried out using POM (Princeton Ocean Model). Simulations
have been fulfilled with assimilation of monthly temperature and salinity arrays optimally interpolated on the model grid. The
regular seasonal climate of the Black Sea circulation and hydrography constructed by Knysh et al. (2005) was used as the base
field to interpolate relatively regular in space and time hydrographic surveys of the Black Sea which were carried out between
1971 and 1993. Spatial and temporal autocorrelation functions for the climatic fields were estimated and approximated by ellipses
(Knysh et al. 2010) bearing in mind high correlation of temperature and salinity on climatic scales. The atmospheric forcing has
been compiled from the ERA-40 global reanalysis (Uppala et al. 2006).
Figure 1 - Total heat flux (ERA-40) (°С·m/s) (top panel) and distribution of basin-averaged temperature within upper layer
0-300m (°С) (bottom panel).
Space-time diagram of the temperature averaged over the basin area presents variability of the temperature field in the upper 0-
300 m layer during 23 years (Figure 1, bottom panel). The analysis of the diagram permits to establish such physical processes of
water masses formation in the Black Sea as the autumn-winter cooling of the sea, the Upper Mixed Layer (UML) formation,
renewal of the Cold Intermediate Layer (CIL), spring-summer heating of waters, the seasonal thermocline and new CIL formation,
its heating and breaking.
The depth of UML boundary varies from 20 to 64 m (isotherm 7°С). The largest thickness of the UML is observed in 1976, 1985,
1987, 1989 and 1992. The seasonal thermocline which forms with the spring-summer heating is observed between the depths
from 10 to 40 m. The upper and lower boundaries of the CIL are usually identified according to the position of the 8°С isotherm.
Temperature of this layer increases till the autumn.
Years 1987 and 1989 are characterized by normal and years 1976, 1985, 1992 and 1993 by cold thermal conditions (Titov 2003).
During the latter ones, the thickness and intensity of the CIL is larger in cold years due to the low total downward heat flux during
winter (Figure 1). Abnormally high values of the downward heat flux also have an influence on the CIL behaviour. There was no
trace of cold waters in the basin-averaged temperature in the autumn of 1971, 1972, 1975, 1977, 1980–1982 and 1984.
Globally, the CIL thickness tends to increase from the end of 70-ies (Figure 1). The CIL thickness and intensity is lower in 1981,
than in 1985, as Figure 2 shows. The summer 1981 temperature on the 50 m depth (abnormally warm winter conditions, Titov
2003) is larger than in summer 1985 (cold thermal conditions). Figure 3 shows that an averaged temperature on the 50 m depth is
18. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 18
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
larger than climatic values within almost the whole year (except October - December). During cold year of 1985 temperature is
lower than the climatic ones.
The analysis of annual mean temperature averaged in different layers is presented in Figure 4. The linear trends in the layers 0-50
and 50-100 m are negative (Figure 4b) in consistency with the negative trend of the total downward heat flux (Figure 4a). Trend in
the layer 100-300 m is slightly positive (Figure 4c). Deeper (500-1000 m layer) trends are positive (not shown).
The structure of the temperature fields in the Black Sea is influenced by several factors: heat fluxes through the interface sea-
atmosphere and through lateral boundaries, lateral and vertical mixing.
Figure 2 - Temperature (°С) cross sections across 43°N in summer 1981 (a) an d 1985
Figure 3 - Annual cycle of temperature (°С) at 50 m depth. Figure 4 - Interannual variability and its linear trend
(red) of: annual mean total downward heat flux
(°С·m/s) (a), annual mean temperature (°С) at 50m (b)
and 200m depth (c).
Part 2. Towards high quality modelling of the Black Sea dynamics
The current MyOcean V0 version of the Black Sea MFC is based on the Marine Hydrophysical Institute (MHI) basin-scale primitive
equation circulation model. It is an eddy-resolving model with horizontal resolution 5x5 km and 38 non-uniformly spaced z-levels in
vertical. Finite-difference approximation of the model equations is done on the C-grid. The second order numerical scheme
conserves energy, carefully describes kinetic and potential energy exchange within every box and admits nonlinear dependence
19. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 19
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
of density from temperature and salinity. Pacanowski and Philander (1981) parameterization is used to describe turbulence in the
upper layer of the basin. Model testing has shown that the Pacanowski and Philander (1981) parameterization works well on the
seasonal scales but is insufficient during intense storm events. The improved version of the Black Sea circulation model is
supplemented by Mellor-Yamada (1982) turbulence closure which should have broader application and which is now on the stage
of testing and validation.
Two prognostic numerical simulations are conducted using the improved version of MHI circulation model. Tangential wind stress,
heat fluxes and precipitations and evaporation on the sea surface are the same as in operational model of the Black Sea MFC
(Ratner et al. 2005, 2006). The goal of simulations was to assess the model skill in the upper mixed layer and in the permanent
pycnocline.
The RUN1 begins from 1 January 2006 using the Black Sea MFC output as the initial conditions. Integration has continued until
the end of the year and included both detrainment and entrainment processes. The simulations were carried out with relaxation to
the measured SST on the sea surface to evaluate the quality of the upper mixed layer simulation
The RUN2 starts from 1 January 2007 also with initial conditions provided by the Black Sea MFC. Integration was carried out
during two years. Only heat flux was specified on the sea surface for the RUN2.
Model & 56093-drifter temperature profiles
Temperature (°C) Temperature (°C) Temperature (°C) Temperature (°C)
Figure 5 - Temperature (°С) profiles in the upper layer of the Black Sea. Blue line is observations and red line is model
simulations.
The improved model validation is carried out by means of comparison of simulations with the free floating buoys data. The RUN1
simulation is compared with data of drifters with thermistor chain (Figure 5) allowing to consider the upper layer thermodynamics.
The model provides reasonable results both for detrainment and entrainment phases (Figure 5).
Figure 6- Temperature section (°С) along 43,7°N in the upper active layer of the Bl ack Sea simulated by new version
circulation model during 2008: a – February 26, b – May 16, c – August 14, d – November 2.
20. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 20
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
Deep stratification is evaluated by the comparison of the RUN2 results with profiling floats data. The second year integration of
RUN2 results are presented on Figure 6. Intense convection occurs during the winter season, which penetrates down to the depth
of 100 m (Figure 6a). Cold intermediate layer (CIL) is formed on the depth of 80 m (Figure 6b) in spring. Core of the CIL with the
temperature of less than 7°С is clearly defined there. The near-surface warm layer is formed then in summer. The CIL is located
below it (Figure 6c). The temperature of CIL slowly increases and becomes higher than 7.5°С in the autumn keeping the
qualitative structure. The near-surface warm layer depth increases during the fall and that leads to the deepening of CIL core
(Figure 6d). Thus, the simulated upper layer stratification is consistent with observations.
Quantitative model validation was conducted on the base of comparison of the simulated temperature and salinity fields and the
floating buoy data (Korotaev et al. 2006). Two buoys (4900489 and 4900541) were in the deep sea zone, two other (4900540 and
4900542) moved along the Caucasus and Anatolian coast respectively. Let us mention that the dynamics in the coastal zone and
in the central part of the basin is strongly different. Hence the comparison of the simulated fields and buoys data allows presenting
the model skill sufficiently well. Salinity profiles for two of four buoys in January 2008 are shown in Figure7. The highest errors
take place on the sea surface and in the halocline area. The error is small and do not exceed 0.03 ‰ below 100 m. The largest
error in summer and spring takes place in the upper 50-meter sea layer. The error profile in the autumn is similar to that in winter
season. Let us mention that the model describes the vertical structure of the halocline qualitatively well and keeps it during two
years of integrations.
Salinity (psu) Salinity deviations (psu) Salinity (psu) Salinity deviations (psu)
Station: Buoy 4900489. Latitude=41.5(N). Longitude=37.8(E).
Date=2007-02-08. Time=07:06(UTC)
19.0,06.0 =−= ss σµ
Station: Buoy 4900542. Latitude=41.4(N). Longitude=39.6(E).
Date=2008-01-27. Time=12:56(UTC)
24.0,24.0 == ss σµ
Figure 7 - Left panels present salinity (psu) profiles in the upper 1500m of the Black Sea simulated by model (red line)
and measured by profiling floats (blue line). Right panels present the difference between the simulated and observed
salinity (psu).
Similarly were considered the temperature profiles (not shown). Temperature may be different of several degrees at the surface in
winter. Data of all four buoys confirms good evolution of temperature profiles during the warming stage. The highest errors which
are less than 2 °C are observed on the sea surface at that time. The upper mixed layer, seasonal thermocline, CIL and the
permanent thermocline are well pronounced in the temperature profiles after two years of integration.
Assimilation of restricted number of temperature and salinity profiles
Favourable situation with available hydrographic observations from 1971 to 1993 has turned to the worth in the following years.
Limited number of cruises was arranged after 1995. The launches of the PALACE profiling floats after 2002 has changed situation
to the best. However even for those years a small number of available temperature and salinity profiles does not allow applying
traditional data assimilation algorithms for the correction of simulations inside the permanent pycnocline. Therefore a new method
is elaborated to assimilate a limited number of temperature and salinity profiles. The method takes into account the Black Sea
specificities. Due to a sharp and narrow pycnocline, a broad range variability of temperature and salinity fields can be presented
by only one empirical orthogonal function (EOF) which describes about 80 percents of energy of oscillations. Therefore the
21. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 21
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
deviation of density (temperature or salinity) field from the basin-averaged stratification along the vertical is approximately
proportional to the sea surface elevation at the same point as the sea level topography can be evaluated with high accuracy by
dynamical method. Then if we have even one measured density (temperature or salinity) profile, it is possible to extrapolate it
along the sea level contour. The obtained pseudo-observations can be then assimilated by means of usual approach. Twin
experiments are carried out to evaluate efficiency of the above mentioned approach.
Figure 8 - Potential density anomaly fields (kg/m³): a, c, d– “truth”; e, f –pseudo-observations. (b) - sea level elevation
(cm).
The model simulations are used to produce pseudo-observation fields of density (salinity, temperature). The procedure of pseudo-
fields formation is the following. Average density profiles along the selected set of the sea level contours are specified at some
moment of time. Then the same density profiles are attached to proper sea level contours at any following or backward time
moment. This procedure permits to extrapolate 3D density forward and backward in time. Accuracy of such extrapolation is shown
below.
The average density profiles for the set of the sea level contours are evaluated on April 22nd 2007 from the model run (Figure 8a).
The pseudo-observations of density are produced on 21st July 2007 according to the described above procedure using the sea
level field simulated by the model for that day (Figure 8c and d). Consistency of the “truth” and pseudo-observations is rather
good. Some statistics was evaluated at 10, 20, 30…110,120 days in order to obtain quantitative characteristic of extrapolation
accuracy and estimate optimal interval of extrapolation.
The dispersions of the difference between “truth” field and pseudo-observations are much smaller than the natural dispersion of
the “truth” field below 60 m whereas it has the same order of magnitude for shallow layers. Dispersion of pseudo-density formed
within 30 to 40-days differs from “truth” density on 3.5% and 3.6 % in winter, 2.6% and 2.6% in spring, 12% and 12.2% in summer,
4.6% and 4.5% in autumn respectively. Thus a 30-40 days period can be chosen as an optimal solution for constructing of
pseudo-observations (density, salinity, temperature). Analysis of the depth dependences of the correlation coefficient between
“truth” and “pseudo” density fields for various seasons reveals the following. Correlation coefficient depends weakly on interval of
22. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 22
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
extrapolation in layer from 50 to 700 m. Its values for 10-day interval change from 0.85 to 0.99 since January to July. For the rest
of the year values are in the range 0.8-0.95. Value of the coefficient for 30-day period at 350 m depth is equal 0.94 in winter, 0.95
in spring, 0.84 in summer and 0.9 in autumn. Maximum of the correlation coefficient is observed in spring at 94 m depth and
equals 0.99.
Thus, the twin experiments show rather high consistency of pseudo-observations to the “truth” data. The simulation of pseudo-
observations should help to build reanalysis fields after 1996. The similar procedure can be applied for the assimilation of profiling
float data by the forecasting system to ensure consistency of model results with observations in the permanent pycnocline area.
Part 3. Pan-European integration
So far two ocean code models have been used in the Black Sea MFC: the Marine Hydrophysical Institute circulation model
(Demyshev and Korotaev 1992) and the Princeton Ocean Model (Blumberg and Mellor 1987; Kubryakov 2004). The MyOcean
project provides opportunity to use NEMO (Madec et al. 1998), a more flexible modelling tool consisting of the ocean general
circulation model, ice thermodynamics, biogeochemical tracers transport model and nesting tool. Implementation of the NEMO in
the Black Sea MFC will provide possibility to use all innovations available to NEMO customers. Some results of the NEMO
simulations at the Black Sea MFC are presented below.
The regular-grid spacing with the horizontal resolution 0.1°×0.0625°is used in simulations of circula tion. The mesh dimension is
141×88 points with 35 z-levels. Vertical grid-spacing is determined according to the hard-wired hyperbolic tangent stretching
function proposed by Madec et al. (1998). Sea level free surface is calculated according to the procedure proposed by Roullet and
Madec (2000) for the case of linearized sea level equation. Second order central scheme is used for tracer advection. The lateral
diffusion Laplace operator is used with a diffusion coefficient equal to 60 m²/s. The so-called invariant vector form is used for
momentum advection. Diffusion of momentum is described by laplacian with horizontal eddy viscosity equal to 300 m²/s. Vertical
turbulent motions are produced with embedded 1.5 turbulent closure model of Blanke and Delecluse (1993). The Black Sea is
considered as closed basin, i.e. neither river runoffs nor Bosphorus and Kerch straits are taken into account.
The model is forced by atmospheric climatology (Belokopytov 2004). Monthly fields of zonal and meridional wind stress
components, evaporation minus precipitation, total downward heat flux and penetrative solar radiation are used as the boundary
conditions. The model is initialized by climatic temperature and salinity fields reconstructed by Knysh et al. (2005). A retroaction
term with climatological SST was added to the surface heat flux to overcome overheating in the upper layer of the model.
Numerical simulations are carried for 10 years. Analysis is based on the results of last year of integration.
Figure 9 - Cross section of temperature (°С) field across 43°N for winter (a), spring (b), sum mer (c) and autumn (d).
23. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 23
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
One of the important features of the Black Sea thermal structure is the cold intermediate layer (CIL). Its boundaries are usually
determined by location of 8°C isotherm. The section s across 43°N are presented on the Figure 9 for dif ferent seasons. It is
evident the upper mixed layer formation, winter renewal of the CIL, spring-summer isolation of the CIL by heating, and autumn
convective cooling. The thickness and location of the CIL are close to observations. The model produces well-pronounced upper
mixed layer in winter with thickness of 40 meters. The formation of seasonal thermocline is observed in summer (Figure 10). The
model reproduces in adequate way the eastern and western gyres of the Black Sea, Rim current and anticyclonic mesoscale
eddies to the right of the jet. The salinity field corresponds to the Black Sea gyre structure.
Thus NEMO-OPA simulates reasonably well the Black Sea climatic circulation. However, several important problems still remain
unsolved. The turbulence closure model should be better tuned for the regional modelling to achieve quantitative consistency of
simulations and observations. Also river runoffs and water flow through the Strait of Kerch and Bosphorus Strait should be
implemented into the model.
Figure 10 - Temperature (°С) profiles in winter and summer
Conclusion
Many scientific questions concerning the Black Sea dynamics are still unresolved in spite of long-term history of investigations.
We do not know definitely how the Black Sea stratification is formed, why there are the eastern and western gyres, how waters of
the deep Bosphorus current propagate to the basin, why mesoscale lenses like “meddies” are not observed in the Black Sea near
the Bosphorus Strait mouth, what is the reason of coastal anticyclones formation, what induces decadal changes of the Black Sea
stratification. MyOcean proposes new tools permitting to consider the above mentioned and many other problems. Final efficiency
of the MyOcean tools depends on the quality of observations and simulations. Thus, the MyOcean project stimulates improvement
of the Black Sea observing system and models which is crucial for the development of the regional oceanography.
Acknowledgements
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme
FP7/2007-2013 under grant agreement n°218812 (MyOce an).
References
Belokopytov V.N. 2004: Thermohaline and hydrological-acoustical structure of the Black Sea, PhD thesis, Sevastopol, MHI NAN
Ukraine, 160 pp. (in Russian)
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with mixed layer physics. J. Phys. Oceanogr., 23, 1363-1388.
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25. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 25
NEMO-Shelf, towards operational oceanography with SST data assimilation on the North West European Shelf
NEMO-Shelf, towards operational oceanography with SST data
assimilation on the North West European Shelf
By Enda J. O’Dea
1
, James While
1
, Rachel Furner
1
, Patrick Hyder
1
, Alex Arnold
1
, David Storkey
1
,
John R. Siddorn
1
, Matthew Martin
1
, Hedong. Liu
2
, James T. Holt
2
1
Met Office, Exeter, U.K.
2
NOC, Liverpool, U.K
Abstract
In the deep ocean data assimilation has proven itself for several years as a valuable constituent in operational ocean forecast
systems. However, data assimilation for the tidally driven shelf presents significant additional challenges. The Met Office is
developing a new operational forecast system for the North West European Shelf that incorporates data assimilation of SST. This
system will replace the existing non-assimilative operational forecast system based on POLCOMS. The physical model utilized in
the new system is a modified version of NEMO suitable for modelling the highly dynamic shelf seas. The system incorporates data
assimilation of SST using a modified version of the existing FOAM system. Preliminary hindcast runs have shown that the new
system provides good skill compared to the existing extensively validated POLCOMS system for the same region. Additionally, the
data assimilation has not had an adverse effect on the simulated water column structure both in well mixed and seasonally
stratified waters. This system is running pre-operationally at the Met Office and will constitute the V1 MyOcean Forecast system
for the North West European Shelf.
Introduction
The North West European Shelf is one of the most studied shelf seas systems in the world owing to the keen economic and
environmental interests of the surrounding nations. Such interests include marine transport, petrochemical exploitation, fishing,
aquaculture and more recently the renewable energy industry in the form of wind, wave and tidal generation of power. Such
interests have motivated the development of a variety of forecast systems for the region. Such systems have evolved from 2D tide
(Flather 1976) and surge models to fully 3D (Holt and James 2001) systems at ever increasing spatial resolution, including ever
more complex processes.
However, until recently the problem of including data assimilation into an operational forecast system for the highly dynamic shelf
seas region has not been tackled. Data assimilation has been used extensively for a number of years in the deep ocean with great
success leading to systems with much greater forecast skill (Martin et al. 2007). Motivated by the potential additional skill of data
assimilation, a new forecast system is under development at the Met Office that in the first instance includes data assimilation of
SST. The new forecast system is based upon the existing FOAM system (Storkey et al. 2010) for the deep ocean which utilizes
NEMO for the core physical ocean model, and an optimal interpolation method of data assimilation.
Currently the Met Office provides an operational forecast system based upon POLCOMS for the North West European Shelf. The
system has been validated over a number of years with continual developments to improve the system. This existing system
provides a firm reference point against which any replacement system can be compared. The old system consists of an outer
domain, the Atlantic Margins Model (AMM) at 12km resolution, and a nested inner domain, the Medium-Resolution Continental
Shelf domain at 7km resolution. The new system aims to replace both domains with a single AMM domain covering the original
AMM region, but at 7km resolution. Both systems are nested into the FOAM 1/12th
degree North Atlantic model that provides
temperature, salinity, sea surface height and depth integrated current information at the open boundaries.
The two systems are compared for a 2 year hindcast period against observations. The new NEMO system is run twice, once with
and once without data assimilation. This is to ensure the underlying physical model provides similar or improved skill compared
the existing POLCOMS system without data assimilation and also provides a reference to compare with our assimilative run. Such
a comparison allows us to understand how the data assimilation of SST changes the solution and if it produces any unrealistic
modifications to the internal dynamics away from the surface.
Physical System
NEMO (Madec 2008) was originally developed to model the deep ocean rather than the shelf seas. Thus, a number of important
modifications were required to ensure that the NEMO physical model is suitable for application in shelf seas. The first modification
is the inclusion of tidal forcing both on the open boundary conditions via a Flather radiation condition (Flather 1976), and the
26. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 26
NEMO-Shelf, towards operational oceanography with SST data assimilation on the North West European Shelf
inclusion of the equilibrium tide. Tidal modelling also requires a non linear free surface and this is facilitated in NEMO by using a
variable volume layer approach. The short time scales associated with tidal propagation and the free surface require a time
splitting approach, splitting modes into barotropic and baroclinic components. Additionally, the bottom boundary condition now
includes a log layer representation, and a k-epsilon turbulence scheme is implemented with the generic length scale option
developed at Mercator Ocean (France).
The coordinate system is a modified version of S-coordinates (Song and Haidvogel 1994). The coordinates are pure sigma on the
shelf and stretch off the shelf to maintain vertical resolution near the surface and bottom. Additionally, where the bathymetry is
particularly steep the coordinates can intersect the bottom. The loss of vertical resolution at these points is more than
compensated by reducing errors related to the horizontal pressure gradient term and steep coordinate surfaces. The horizontal
pressure gradient scheme itself is also updated to a pressure Jacobian scheme and it performs very well in classical tests
including sea mounts in specified uniform stratification.
Other modifications include
• Allowing the bilaplacian and laplacian diffusion operators to work on geopotential or isopycnal surfaces separately.
• River inputs to be mixed to prescribed water depths.
• A POLCOMS style light attenuation coefficient that varies dependant on total water depth.
• The addition of an inverse barometer effect from atmospheric pressure forcing.
With these modifications the physical modelling system has been validated in a constant density case for the evaluation of tides.
Additionally, a fully baroclinic but non-assimilative simulation is used to assess the forecast system without assimilation.
Assimilation System
Data assimilation within NEMO-shelf uses the Analysis Correction method of (Martin et al. 2007) to assimilate SST data. In
essence this is an iterative Optimal Interpolation scheme, which treats both model and observation errors, with their associated
covariances, as constant. Operationally, assimilation proceeds in three steps. Firstly a 1 day model forecast is performed, within
which observations are compared to model output at the nearest time-step; this is a First Guess at Appropriate Time FGAT
system. In the second stage observation minus model differences are converted to SST increments by solving the Best Linear
Unbiased Estimator (BLUE) equations. In solving these equations, we use precalculated values for observation error (assumed
uncorrelated), model error, and model error covariances. Finally, to produce the analysis the model is reran for the same day with
the increments added onto the SST field using the Incremental Analysis Update (IAU, see Bloom et al. 1996) method. Increments
are added into the model down to the base of the instantaneous mixed layer, where the mixed layer depth is determined by a
0.20
C temperature difference from the surface.
In the present set-up assimilated satellite observations are taken from the infra-red SEVIRI, AATSR, METOP and AVHRR
instruments and from the AMSRE microwave sensor. Because of biases in satellite data, a bias correction scheme is used to
correct satellite measurements, with the AATSR sensor, which is considered to be less biased than the other satellite instruments,
and available in-situ data used as reference ‘unbiased’ data. In addition to satellite measurements, we also assimilate available in-
situ data from drifting buoys, moorings and ships. All data are quality controlled using a Bayesian system (Lorenc and Hammon,
1988) before being assimilated.
Results
Barotropic Results
A constant density simulation with only tidal forcing at the boundaries with online harmonic analysis of the main tidal constituents
confirms that the overall skill of the simulated tides is similar to POLCOMS. The SSH RMS errors for M2 are 0.188m for NEMO
and 0.179m for POLCOMS and the mean error is -0.014m and 0.055m for NEMO and POLCOMS respectively. Figure 1 displays
the SSH amplitude and phase errors between NEMO and observations for the dominant M2 constituent. It should be noted that
the underlying bathymetry of the POLCOMS and NEMO systems are the same. Further refinement of the tides should be possible
with more accurate bathymetry at 7km resolution.
Preliminary baroclinic and assimilative results
The model system both with and without data assimilation is compared against POLCOMS for the hindcast period 2007-2008 for a
variety of observation types. For 2008 the non-assimilative NEMO system has an SST RMS error of 0.660
C and for POLCOMS it
is 0.690
C. However, there is a warm bias in NEMO of 0.30
C compared to 0.20
C in POLCOMS. With assimilation of SST the errors
are much reduced, with an RMS SST error of 0.380
C and mean of 0.10
C respectively. Both systems are also compared through
27. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 27
NEMO-Shelf, towards operational oceanography with SST data assimilation on the North West European Shelf
the water column using data at profile points and the ICES data set for the North Sea. Figure 2 gives the mean surface minus bed
temperature difference for 2008 for the non assimilative NEMO system, POLCOMS and the ICES data set. The NEMO results do
appear to be closer to ICES than POLCOMS.
Figure 3 displays the surface-bed temperatures for 2007 from the assimilative and non assimilative NEMO systems the ICES data
set. Through most of the North Sea the effect of data assimilation is small on the stratification with the exception being in the
Norwegian trench where stratification is intensified.
Figure 1 - SSH amplitude in metres (top left panel) and phase errors in degrees (top right panel) between NEMO and
observations for the dominant M2 constituent for NEMO constant density run and absolute SSH amplitude in metres
(bottom left panel) and phase in degrees (bottom right panel) for model plotted against observations also for the M2
constituent.
Figure 2 - Surface minus bed temperature (0
C) for 2008 in NEMO (left panel), POLCOMS (middle panel) and ICES (right
panel)
28. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 28
NEMO-Shelf, towards operational oceanography with SST data assimilation on the North West European Shelf
Figure 3 - Surface minus bed temperature (0
C) for 2007 in NEMO with (left panel) and without assimilation (middle panel)
and ICES (right panel)
Conclusions
A new shelf seas operational forecasting system for the North West European Shelf has been developed based on NEMO with OI
data assimilation of SST. The SST data assimilation has improved the forecast skill of the model without marked disruption of the
3D structure of the water column. The new system is undergoing extensive validation tests and is running pre-operationally at the
Met Office to ensure the system’s robustness before full operational implementation.
In addition to the physical system described here, the ecosystem component ERSEM is also being coupled to the system with a
view to replacing the existing POLCOMS-ERSEM operational system at the Met Office. Future upgrades to the system include
bathymetry, improved light attenuation, profile data assimilation, river inputs from E-HYPE and Baltic inflow from a Baltic model in
place of climatology.
References
Bloom, S. C., Takacs, L. L., Da Silver A. M. and Ledvina, D., 1996: Data assimilation using incremental analysis updates. Monthly
Weather Review, 124, 1256-1271
Flather, R. A., 1976: A tidal model of the North West European continental shelf, Mem. Soc. R. Sci. Liege, 10, 141-164
Holt, J.T., James, I.D., 2001: An s-coordinate density evolving model of the northwest European continental shelf Part 1 model
description and density structure. Journal of Geophysical Research 106, 14015–14034.
Lorenc, A. C. and Hammon, 1988: Objective quality control of observations using Bayesian methods. Theory, and a practical
implementation. Q. J. Roy Met Soc, 114, 515-543
Madec G. 2008. NEMO ocean engine. Note du Pole de modélisation, Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace (IPSL), France, No 27 ISSN
No 1288–1619
Martin, M.J., Hines, A. and Bell, M.J., 2007: Data assimilation in the FOAM operational short-range ocean forecasting system: a
description of the scheme and its impact. Q. J. Roy Met Soc, 133, 981-995
Song, Y., and D. Haidvogel, 1994: A semi-implicit ocean circulation model using a generalized topography-following coordinates
system, J. Comput. Phys., 115, 228-244
Storkey, D., E.W. Blockley, R. Furner, C. Giuavarc'h, D. Lea, M.J. Martin, R.M. Barciela, A. Hines, P. Hyder, J.R. Siddorn, 2010.
Forecasting the ocean state using NEMO: The new FOAM system. J. Operational Oceanography, 3, 3-15.
29. Mercator Ocean Quarterly Newsletter #39 – October 2010 – Page 29
Notebook
Notebook
Editorial Board:
Laurence Crosnier
Secretary:
Fabrice Messal
Articles:
The FERRYBOX component in MyOcean
By Dominique Durand, Are Folkestad, Kai Sørensen
The new regional generation of Mercator Ocean system in the
Iberian Biscay Irish (IBI) area
By Sylvain Cailleau, Jérôme Chanut, Bruno Levier, Claire Maraldi, Guillaume
Reffray
The MyOcean Black Sea from a scientific point of view
By Sergey Demyshev, Vasily Knysh, Gennady Korotaev, Alexander
Kubryakov, Artem Mizyuk
NEMO-Shelf, towards operational oceanography with SST data
assimilation on the North West European Shelf
By Enda J. O’Dea, James While, Rachel Furner, Patrick Hyder, Alex Arnold,
David Storkey, John R. Siddorn, Matthew Martin, Hedong. Liu, James T.
Holt
Contact :
Please send us your comments to the following e-mail address: webmaster@mercator-ocean.frUH
Next issue: January 2011