Abstract

Abstract. Internally consistent, quality-controlled (QC) data products play an important role in promoting regional-to-global research efforts to understand societal vulnerabilities to ocean acidification (OA). However, there are currently no such data products for the coastal ocean, where most of the OA-susceptible commercial and recreational fisheries and aquaculture industries are located. In this collaborative effort, we compiled, quality-controlled, and synthesized 2 decades of discrete measurements of inorganic carbon system parameters, oxygen, and nutrient chemistry data from the North American continental shelves to generate a data product called the Coastal Ocean Data Analysis Product in North America (CODAP-NA). There are few deep-water (> 1500 m) sampling locations in the current data product. As a result, crossover analyses, which rely on comparisons between measurements on different cruises in the stable deep ocean, could not form the basis for cruise-to-cruise adjustments. For this reason, care was taken in the selection of data sets to include in this initial release of CODAP-NA, and only data sets from laboratories with known quality assurance practices were included. New consistency checks and outlier detections were used to QC the data. Future releases of this CODAP-NA product will use this core data product as the basis for cruise-to-cruise comparisons. We worked closely with the investigators who collected and measured these data during the QC process. This version (v2021) of the CODAP-NA is comprised of 3391 oceanographic profiles from 61 research cruises covering all continental shelves of North America, from Alaska to Mexico in the west and from Canada to the Caribbean in the east. Data for 14 variables (temperature; salinity; dissolved oxygen content; dissolved inorganic carbon content; total alkalinity; pH on total scale; carbonate ion content; fugacity of carbon dioxide; and substance contents of silicate, phosphate, nitrate, nitrite, nitrate plus nitrite, and ammonium) have been subjected to extensive QC. CODAP-NA is available as a merged data product (Excel, CSV, MATLAB, and NetCDF; https://doi.org/10.25921/531n-c230, https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/oceans/ncei/ocads/metadata/0219960.html, last access: 15 May 2021) (Jiang et al., 2021a). The original cruise data have also been updated with data providers' consent and summarized in a table with links to NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) archives (https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/ocean-acidification-data-stewardship-oads/synthesis/NAcruises.html).

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic ocean acidification (OA) refers to the process by which the ocean’s uptake of excess anthropogenic atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) reduces ocean pH and calcium carbonate mineral saturation states (Feely et al, 2004; Orr et al, 2005; Jiang et al, 2019; IPCC, 2011)

  • We compiled and quality-controlled discrete sampling-based data for inorganic carbon, oxygen, and nutrient chemistry, and hydrographic parameters collected from the entire North American continental shelves and created a data product called the Coastal Ocean Data Analysis Product in North America (CODAP-NA)

  • For all the aforementioned plots, we enable features to go through each profile individually with all data from a cruise plotted together in the background

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Summary

Introduction

Anthropogenic ocean acidification (OA) refers to the process by which the ocean’s uptake of excess anthropogenic atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) reduces ocean pH and calcium carbonate mineral saturation states (Feely et al, 2004; Orr et al, 2005; Jiang et al, 2019; IPCC, 2011). We compiled and quality-controlled discrete sampling-based data for inorganic carbon, oxygen, and nutrient chemistry, and hydrographic parameters collected from the entire North American continental shelves and created a data product called the Coastal Ocean Data Analysis Product in North America (CODAP-NA). We serve both the internally consistent climate quality data product and the qualitycontrolled original cruise data through the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). We hope this release will be considered analogous to GLODAPv2 (Olsen et al, 2016), in the sense that the new data sets added in the subsequent GLODAPv2.2019 and GLODAPv2.2020 updates (Olsen et al, 2019, 2020) were brought to be internally consistent with the fully quality-controlled data in the original GLODAPv2 product

Study area
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20 East coast 21 East coast
37 East coast 38 East coast
Data products
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Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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