Abstract

SUMMARY: Oceanographic measurements, though difficult and expensive, are essential for effective study, stewardship, preservation, and management of our oceanic and atmospheric systems. Ocean sciences have been driven by technologies enabling new observations, discoveries, and modelling of diverse interdisciplinary phenomena. Despite rapid advances in ocean sampling capabilities, the numbers of disciplinary variables that are necessary to solve oceanographic problems are large and increasing. In addition, the time and space scales of key processes span over ten orders of magnitude; presently, there remain major spectral gaps in our sampling. Thus, undersampling presents the main limitation to our understanding of global climate change; variability in fish biomass and regime shifts; and episodic and extreme events. Fortunately, recent advances in ocean platforms and in situ autonomous sampling systems and satellite sensors are enabling unprecedented rates of data acquisition as well as the expansion of temporal and spatial coverage. Consequently, improved sampling strategies will lead to a reduction in ocean forecasting error for predictions of a multitude of atmospheric and oceanic processes. Nonetheless, major challenges remain to massively increase the variety and quantity of ocean measurements and to effectively coordinate, synthesize, and distribute oceanographic data sets. In particular, numbers of measurements are limited by the costs of instruments and their deployment as well as data processing and production of useful data products and visualizations. Looking forward, many novel and innovative technologies involving computing, nanotechnology, robotics, information and telemetry technologies, space sciences, and molecular biology are being developed at a fast pace for numerous applications (Kaku, 1997; Kurzweil, 1999). It is anticipated that several of these can and will be transitioned to the ocean sciences and will prove to be extremely beneficial for oceanographers in the next few decades. Already, autonomous, ‘robotic’ in situ sampling, high spectral resolution optical and chemical instrumentation, multi-frequency acoustics, and biomolecular techniques are being utilized by a limited number of oceanographers. Also, increased temporal and spatial sampling capabilities for expanding numbers of interdisciplinary variables are being accelerated thanks to both new technologies and utilization of data assimilation models coupled with autonomous sampling platforms. Data networks coupled with internet connectivity are rapidly increasing access to and utilization of data sets. In this essay, we review recent technological progress for solving some key oceanographic problems and highlight some of the foreseeable challenges and opportunities of ocean science technologies and their applications.

Highlights

  • The oceans must have fascinated early humankind living adjacent to them in similar ways that they fascinate us even today

  • We describe how oceanographers have moved well beyond sampling capabilities that were limited to a single ship carrying only nets, bottles, and a few thermometers just a few decades ago

  • To set the context of the oceanographic community’s progress in ocean sampling, it is worth reminding ourselves that only a few decades ago, biological oceanographic sampling was done almost exclusively using nets, hydrographic samples were collected with bottles activated by wire messengers, basic physical data were recorded on paper strip charts, and manipulation of data was done by using hand calculators or in many rooms full of large computers with capabilities that are surpassed today by even modestly priced laptop computers

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Summary

SCIENTIA MARINA

PROMOTING MARINE SCIENCE: CONTRIBUTIONS TO CELEBRATE THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF SCIENTIA MARINA. Increased temporal and spatial sampling capabilities for expanding numbers of interdisciplinary variables are being accelerated thanks to both new technologies and utilization of data assimilation models coupled with autonomous sampling platforms. Las ciencias marinas han avanzado a medida que la tecnología permitía nuevas observaciones y procesar modelos de fenómenos de diversa interdisciplinaridad. El número de variables necesarias para resolver preguntas en el sistema marino es muy alto y el rango de las escalas de tiempo y espacio asociadas a procesos clave es de diez ordenes de magnitud. La capacidad de toma de datos a distintas escalas de tiempo y espacio está continuamente aumentando gracias a las nuevas tecnologías y a la mejora de los sistemas de tratamiento de datos. Palabras clave: instrumentación, plataformas, modelos en ocenografía, interdisciplinariedad, sistemas de observación

INTRODUCTION
CONSIDERATIONS FOR OCEAN SAMPLING
Ecosystem changes
PROGRESS IN OCEAN SAMPLING
Deep ocean studies
EXAMPLE OCEAN PROBLEMS
Programs including the World Ocean Circulation
Impacts of hurricanes and typhoons on the ocean
Harmful algal blooms
Oceans and human health
THE OCEAN
Sensors and genetic probes
Satellites and tracking systems
Data integration
Observation systems
VISIONS OF A FUTURE OCEAN EXPERIMENT
OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH AND
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