Satellite Ocean Colour: Current Status and Future Perspective SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 129 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 0 time in Scopus
Title
Satellite Ocean Colour: Current Status and Future Perspective
Author(s)
Groom, Steve; Sathyendranath, Shubha; Ban, Yai; Bernard, Stewart; Brewin, Robert; Brotas, Vanda; Brockmann, Carsten; Chauhan, Prakash; Choi, Jong-kuk; Chuprin, Andrei; Ciavatta, Stefano; Cipollini, Paolo; Donlon, Craig; Franz, Bryan; He, Xianqiang; Hirata, Takafumi; Jackson, Tom; Kampel, Milton; Krasemann, Hajo; Lavender, Samantha; Pardo-Martinez, Silvia; Melin, Frederic; Platt, Trevor; Santoleri, Rosalia; Skakala, Jozef; Schaeffer, Blake; Smith, Marie; Steinmetz, Francois; Valente, Andre; Wang, Menghua
KIOST Author(s)
Choi, Jong Kuk(최종국)
Alternative Author(s)
최종국
Publication Year
2019-08
Abstract
Spectrally resolved water-leaving radiances (ocean colour) and inferred chlorophyll concentration are key to studying phytoplankton dynamics at seasonal and interannual scales, for a better understanding of the role of phytoplankton in marine biogeochemistry; the global carbon cycle; and the response of marine ecosystems to climate variability, change and feedback processes. Ocean colour data also have a critical role in operational observation systems monitoring coastal eutrophication, harmful algal blooms, and sediment plumes. The contiguous ocean-colour record reached 21 years in 2018; however, it is comprised of a number of one-off missions such that creating a consistent time-series of ocean-colour data requires merging of the individual sensors (including MERIS, Aqua-MODIS, SeaWiFS, VIIRS, and OLCI) with differing sensor characteristics, without introducing artefacts. By contrast, the next decade will see consistent observations from operational ocean colour series with sensors of similar design and with a replacement strategy. Also, by 2029 the record will start to be of sufficient duration to discriminate climate change impacts from natural variability, at least in some regions. This paper describes the current status and future prospects in the field of ocean colour focusing on large to medium resolution observations of oceans and coastal seas. It reviews the user requirements in terms of products and uncertainty characteristics and then describes features of current and future satellite ocean-colour sensors, both operational and innovative. The key role of in situ validation and calibration is highlighted as are ground segments that process the data received from the ocean-colour sensors and deliver analysis-ready products to end-users. Example applications of the ocean-colour data are presented, focusing on the climate data record and operational applications including water quality and assimilation into numerical models. Current capacity building and training activities pertinent to ocean colour are described and finally a summary of future perspectives is provided.
ISSN
2296-7745
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/554
DOI
10.3389/fmars.2019.00485
Bibliographic Citation
FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, v.6, 2019
Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Keywords
ocean colour; phytoplankton; ground-segment; climate data records; water-quality; capacity building
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Review
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