Abstract

Mapping heterogeneity of the ocean’s surface waters is important for understanding biogeographical distributions, ocean surface habitat mapping, and ocean surface stability. This article describes the Ocean-surface Heterogeneity MApping (OHMA) algorithm—an objective, replicable approach that uses hypertemporal, satellite-derived datasets to map the spatio-temporal heterogeneity of ocean surface waters. The OHMA produces a suite of complementary datasets—a surface spatio-temporal heterogeneity dataset, and an optimised spatio-temporal classification of the ocean surface. It was demonstrated here using a hypertemporal Sea Surface Temperature image dataset of the North Atlantic. Validation with Underway-derived temperature data showed higher heterogeneity areas were associated with stronger surface temperature gradients, or an increased presence of locally extreme temperature values. Using four exploratory case studies, spatio-temporal heterogeneity values were related to a range of region-specific surface and sub-surface characteristics including fronts, currents and bathymetry. The values conveyed the interactions between these parameters as a single metric. Such over-arching heterogeneity information is virtually impossible to map from in-situ instruments, or less temporally dense satellite datasets. This study demonstrated the OHMA approach is a useful and robust tool to explore, examine, and describe the ocean’s surface. It advances our capability to map biologically relevant measures of ocean surface heterogeneity. It can support ongoing efforts in Ocean Surface Partitioning, and attempts to understand marine species distributions. The study highlighted the need to establish dedicated spatio-temporal ocean validation sites, specifically measured using surface transits, to support advances in hypertemporal ocean data use, and exploitation. A number of future research avenues are also highlighted.

Highlights

  • This dataset was generated by applying the Ocean-surface Heterogeneity MApping (OHMA) process to a

  • These extreme value artifacts are highlighted as features A-E in Figure 6, and indicate the OHMA process performed as expected

  • It advances our capability to map ocean surface spatio-temporal heterogeneity, with the potential to provide information on biophysical processes which affect the distribution of marine species

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Summary

Introduction

The world is heterogeneous and non-equilibrial [1]. This heterogeneity is underpinned by complexity and/or variability, as properties change over space and/or time [2]. The ocean structure, for example, is shaped by changes in water properties (e.g., temperature, salinity, nutrient content) and water movement in space and time. They create a 4-dimensional architecture which is more structurally complex, and spatio-temporally variable. These confluence zones, or discontinuities, offer a wide variety

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