Abstract

The new pelagic Operational Observatory of the Catalan Sea (OOCS) for the coordinated multisensor measurement of atmospheric and oceanographic conditions has been recently installed (2009) in the Catalan Sea (41°39′N, 2°54′E; Western Mediterranean) and continuously operated (with minor maintenance gaps) until today. This multiparametric platform is moored at 192 m depth, 9.3 km off Blanes harbour (Girona, Spain). It is composed of a buoy holding atmospheric sensors and a set of oceanographic sensors measuring the water conditions over the upper 100 m depth. The station is located close to the head of the Blanes submarine canyon where an important multispecies pelagic and demersal fishery gives the station ecological and economic relevance. The OOCS provides important records on atmospheric and oceanographic conditions, the latter through the measurement of hydrological and biogeochemical parameters, at depths with a time resolution never attained before for this area of the Mediterranean. Twenty four moored sensors and probes operating in a coordinated fashion provide important data on Essential Ocean Variables (EOVs; UNESCO) such as temperature, salinity, pressure, dissolved oxygen, chlorophyll fluorescence, and turbidity. In comparison with other pelagic observatories presently operating in other world areas, OOCS also measures photosynthetic available radiation (PAR) from above the sea surface and at different depths in the upper 50 m. Data are recorded each 30 min and transmitted in real-time to a ground station via GPRS. This time series is published and automatically updated at the frequency of data collection on the official OOCS website (http://www.ceab.csic.es/~oceans). Under development are embedded automated routines for the in situ data treatment and assimilation into numerical models, in order to provide a reliable local marine processing forecast. In this work, our goal is to detail the OOCS multisensor architecture in relation to the coordinated capability for the remote, continuous and prolonged monitoring of atmospheric and oceanographic conditions, including data communication and storage. Accordingly, time series of measurements for a number of biological parameters will be presented for the summer months of 2011. Marine hindcast outputs from the numerical models implemented for simulating the conditions over the study area are shown. The strong changes of atmospheric conditions recorded in the last years over the area have altered the marine conditions of living organisms, but the dimension of the impact remains unclear. The OOCS multisensor coordinated monitoring has been specifically designed to address this issue, thus contributing to better understand the present environmental fluctuations and to provide a sound basis for a more accurate marine forecast system.

Highlights

  • Multisensor, remote, continuous and autonomous monitoring of the marine pelagic system is essential in order to provide in real-time rigorous measurements of atmospheric and seawater conditions influencing the living resources [1,2]

  • We present a new pelagic multiparametric observatory measuring several important habitat parameters including those of ecological relevance for conservation (EOVs) from the water column and the atmosphere in a coordinated fashion

  • In this study we describe the architecture and functioning of a new pelagic observatory for the coordinated multisensor monitoring of the atmospheric and oceanographic western Mediterranean environment

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Summary

Introduction

Multisensor, remote, continuous and autonomous monitoring of the marine pelagic system (i.e., water column) is essential in order to provide in real-time rigorous measurements of atmospheric and seawater conditions influencing the living resources [1,2]. Some permanent multisensor pelagic observatories such as the BermudaAtlantic Time Series Study (BATS) and the Hawaii Ocean Time Series (HOT) have been collecting data since 1988, providing long time-series of hydrographic and biogeochemical parameters, very useful for understanding local, regional, and global climate changes [3] Those stations are presently a reference for research institutions carrying out multi-disciplinary studies on marine ecosystems functioning. In this context, the new Operational Observatory of the Catalan Sea (OOCS) here presented is a pelagic multisensor platform installed in 2009 for the coordinated monitoring of the atmospheric and the oceanographic variables, including EOVs, at shallow depths (100 m) and medium time resolutions (30 min) not yet achieved anywhere else in the Mediterranean. Data will be assimilated into numerical models presently under implementation, in order to show a feasible way to use OOCS data for atmospheric and marine forecasting

The Study Area
Observatory Components
The Buoy Structure
The Mooring Line Configuration
The Multisensor Coordinated Asset
The Meteorological Sensors
The Oceanographic Sensors
An Example of Real-Time Multisensor Coordinated Monitoring
Data Incorporation into Multiparametric Oceanographic Models
Discussion
OOCS Potentials
The Importance of Multiparametric Data Monitoring and Model Validation
Collaborative Scientific and Academic Activities and Dissemination Activities
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