Abstract

Abstract. SANIFS (Southern Adriatic Northern Ionian coastal Forecasting System) is a coastal-ocean operational system based on the unstructured grid finite-element three-dimensional hydrodynamic SHYFEM model, providing short-term forecasts. The operational chain is based on a downscaling approach starting from the large-scale system for the entire Mediterranean Basin (MFS, Mediterranean Forecasting System), which provides initial and boundary condition fields to the nested system. The model is configured to provide hydrodynamics and active tracer forecasts both in open ocean and coastal waters of southeastern Italy using a variable horizontal resolution from the open sea (3–4 km) to coastal areas (50–500 m). Given that the coastal fields are driven by a combination of both local (also known as coastal) and deep-ocean forcings propagating along the shelf, the performance of SANIFS was verified both in forecast and simulation mode, first (i) on the large and shelf-coastal scales by comparing with a large-scale survey CTD (conductivity–temperature–depth) in the Gulf of Taranto and then (ii) on the coastal-harbour scale (Mar Grande of Taranto) by comparison with CTD, ADCP (acoustic doppler current profiler) and tide gauge data. Sensitivity tests were performed on initialization conditions (mainly focused on spin-up procedures) and on surface boundary conditions by assessing the reliability of two alternative datasets at different horizontal resolution (12.5 and 6.5 km). The SANIFS forecasts at a lead time of 1 day were compared with the MFS forecasts, highlighting that SANIFS is able to retain the large-scale dynamics of MFS. The large-scale dynamics of MFS are correctly propagated to the shelf-coastal scale, improving the forecast accuracy (+17 % for temperature and +6 % for salinity compared to MFS). Moreover, the added value of SANIFS was assessed on the coastal-harbour scale, which is not covered by the coarse resolution of MFS, where the fields forecasted by SANIFS reproduced the observations well (temperature RMSE equal to 0.11 °C). Furthermore, SANIFS simulations were compared with hourly time series of temperature, sea level and velocity measured on the coastal-harbour scale, showing a good agreement. Simulations in the Gulf of Taranto described a circulation mainly characterized by an anticyclonic gyre with the presence of cyclonic vortexes in shelf-coastal areas. A surface water inflow from the open sea to Mar Grande characterizes the coastal-harbour scale.

Highlights

  • Many human activities are concentrated in coastal areas where traditional resource-based activities, such as coastal fisheries and aquaculture, coexist with urban development, port traffic and tourism

  • Given that the coastal fields are driven by a combination of both local and deep-ocean forcings propagating along the shelf, the performance of SANIFS was verified both in forecast and simulation mode, first (i) on the large and shelf-coastal scales by comparing with a large-scale survey CTD in the Gulf of Taranto and (ii) on the coastal-harbour scale (Mar Grande of Taranto) by comparison with CTD, ADCP and tide gauge data

  • In respect to the LS1, here SANIFS results are in better agreement with observations because the LS2 forecasts benefit the LS1 data assimilation in Mediterranean Forecasting System (MFS), reducing the overall error

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Summary

Introduction

Many human activities are concentrated in coastal areas where traditional resource-based activities, such as coastal fisheries and aquaculture, coexist with urban development, port traffic and tourism The management of such a complex area at the interface between land and ocean environments, requires numerical modelling and predictive capabilities that are possible due to the availability of largescale ocean forecasts and analyses used to initialize coastal models that downscale and increase the accuracy of forecasts near the coasts (Pinardi et al, 2003; Pinardi and Coppini, 2010). Unstructured grid and downscaling approaches were incorporated to build the very-high-resolution operational system SANIFS (Southern Adriatic Northern Ionian coastal Forecasting System), which produces short-term forecasts and is constantly under development.

The forecasting system: definition and implementation
Model settings
Surface boundary conditions
Lateral open boundary conditions
The operational configuration
The validation dataset
Initialization procedure and spin-up time
10 Oct 11 Oct
Simulation tests on a coastal-harbour scale
Circulation structures in the Gulf of Taranto
Conclusions
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