Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems.

Metadata record for data from AAS (ASAC) Project 3024. Public The proposed research will derive improved estimates of East Antarctic fast-ice extent and thickness, and their variability, from satellite data. These will be used to explicitly test relationships between fast ice/other environmental par...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: MASSOM, ROB (hasPrincipalInvestigator), MASSOM, ROB (processor), Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Australian Antarctic Data Centre
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://researchdata.ands.org.au/remote-sensing-near-shelves-ecosystems/700106
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_3024
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::700106
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic biota
oceans
ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
EARTH SCIENCE
CRYOSPHERE
SEA ICE
ICE EXTENT
PENGUINS
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES
BIRDS
remote sensing
Emperor Penguin
Fast Ice
Ice Shelf
ICESAT &gt
Ice
Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite
RADARSAT-1
SATELLITES
RADARSAT-2
ICESAT-2 &gt
Cloud
and land Elevation Satellite-2
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
spellingShingle biota
oceans
ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
EARTH SCIENCE
CRYOSPHERE
SEA ICE
ICE EXTENT
PENGUINS
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES
BIRDS
remote sensing
Emperor Penguin
Fast Ice
Ice Shelf
ICESAT &gt
Ice
Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite
RADARSAT-1
SATELLITES
RADARSAT-2
ICESAT-2 &gt
Cloud
and land Elevation Satellite-2
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems.
topic_facet biota
oceans
ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
EARTH SCIENCE
CRYOSPHERE
SEA ICE
ICE EXTENT
PENGUINS
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES
BIRDS
remote sensing
Emperor Penguin
Fast Ice
Ice Shelf
ICESAT &gt
Ice
Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite
RADARSAT-1
SATELLITES
RADARSAT-2
ICESAT-2 &gt
Cloud
and land Elevation Satellite-2
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
description Metadata record for data from AAS (ASAC) Project 3024. Public The proposed research will derive improved estimates of East Antarctic fast-ice extent and thickness, and their variability, from satellite data. These will be used to explicitly test relationships between fast ice/other environmental parameters and Emperor penguin population dynamics. We shall also combine observations with a wave-ice shelf-sea ice interaction model to test the hypothesis that catastrophic ice shelf break-up events on the E. Antarctic Peninsula are linked to increased ocean wave energy associated with sea-ice extent anomalies (driven by atmospheric anomalies), and/or long-period swell from far-remote storms. This work will aid comprehension of processes responsible for recent rapid ice-shelf demise. Project objectives: 1. To measure and monitor East Antarctic fast ice areal extent and thickness, and their spatio-temporal variability, using satellite remote sensing. 2) To analyse the impact of fast ice variability on the breeding success of Emperor penguins (Aptenodytes forsteri). 3) To investigate the potential impact of sea ice on recent ice shelf break-up breakup on the Antarctic Peninsula. Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: This project has shown a strong correlation between interannual fast ice variability and Emperor penguin breeding success at Dumont d'Urville, and has produced satellite-based maps of East Antarctic fast ice (radar snapshot mosaics from November 1997/98 and 20-day composite images for 2005-2008, extending back to 2000). Secondly, significant progress was made towards implicating an atmospherically-driven anomalous lack of sea ice in recent Antarctic ice-shelf disintegrations. Finally, new research highlights a previously-overlooked mechanical coupling between the floating Mertz Glacier tongue and very thick (greater than 25m) and old (greater than 20yrs) fast ice attached to it, with important implications for ice-sheet margin stability. Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: 1) To measure and monitor East Antarctic fast ice areal extent and thickness, and their spatio-temporal variability, using satellite remote sensing. Considerable progress has been made against this objective, building on last year's publication of the first detailed "snapshot" maps of landfast sea ice (fast ice) extent around the East Antarctic coast from 75 degrees E-170 degrees E for the Novembers of 1997 and 1999 using RADARSAT satellite ScanSAR images (see Giles et al., 2008). The main achievements are: * The development of an improved semi-automated method to successfully derive fast ice extent (and pack ice motion) from time series of Envisat Advanced SAR images (Giles et al., in prep.), via a project with the European Space Agency and the International Space Science Institute (Berne, Switzerland). Fast ice is identified as regions of zero motion in the cross-correlation analysis of carefully co-registered pairs of satellite SAR images. * Significant progress in the PhD project (Alex Fraser) aimed at deriving longer and near-continuous time series of fast ice extent from time series of NASA MODIS visible and thermal IR imagery at 1 km resolution. A major challenge has been to address the problem of effectively 'removing' persistent cloud cover from the images. This has been achieved by compositing many thousands of MODIS images to create 20-day composite images of the entire East Antarctic coastal zone from 10W to 170E. This technique was showcased at the prestigious International Geoscience and Remote Sensing 2009 conference in South Africa in July 2009 (Fraser et al., 2009a), with subsequent publication by Fraser et al. (2009b). During the year, this work resulted in an important new time series of fast ice extent that runs from 2000 to 2008 inclusive (Fraser et al., in prep.), with techniques being described in Fraser et al. (in press). This unique dataset represents by far the most detailed estimate of East Antarctic fast ice and its spatio-temporal variability to date. It furthermore represents an important new baseline against which to gauge change, given that Antarctic fast ice is a key yet poorly understood component of the global cryosphere (and ocean freshwater budget), is of immense ecological significance (see 2 below), and is a sensitive indicator of climate change/variability. This baseline is directly comparable to the more familiar overall sea ice (pack ice) extent product. Work is underway to determine why large regional differences occur in fast ice distribution and behaviour, including analysis of the role of bathymetry, grounded icebergs and changes in wind patterns. This work also provides crucial regional-scale fast ice information in support of detailed localised fast ice measurements carried out within the Antarctic Fast Ice network at Casey and Davis (AAS 3032). * A collaborative project has been established with Drs Fricker (USA) and Legresy (France) to estimate the thickness of a large region of perennial fast ice adjacent and attached to the Mertz Glacier Tongue. This has been achieved by combining satellite imagery with surface elevation data from the NASA's ICESat laser altimeter satellite, although current unknowns include the thickness and density of the overlying snowcover. The results suggest that this fast ice is extraordinarily thick i.e. greater than 25 m, and may be at least 20 years old (Massom et al., subm., a). Work examining the glaciological significance of this extremely thick fast ice is described in 3 (below). Work is also underway to evaluate the impact on this and regional fast ice of the major calving of the Mertz Glacier in February 2010. 2) To analyse the impact of fast ice variability on the breeding success of Emperor penguins The first element of this multi-disciplinary, international study was completed last year i.e. a case study showing strong links between Emperor penguin breeding success at Dumont d'Urville and fast ice distribution along the Adelie Land coast of East Antarctica and its variability due to variability in the regional wind field. Results were published in Marine Ecology Progress Series (Massom et al., 2009a), and were also presented in a keynote address to the Xth SCAR International Biology Symposium in September 2009. Work is underway to extend this study both temporally and to other species and regions, using the new MODIS-derived time series of 20-day composite maps of fast ice extent (see 1 above). This work will include a comparison of the fast ice information with new data from French penguin scientists (Drs Barbraud, Ancel and LeMayo) on Emperor penguin mortality and other demographic parameters, with a view to discovering links between the penguin demographics and fast ice variability due to changing weather patterns. Further work is in its initial stages to study the impact of fast ice variability on i) Weddell seal foraging behaviour (with Dr Hindell's group at the Univ. of Tasmania), ii) Adelie penguin breeding success and foraging behaviour (with Drs Southwell and Emmerson, AAD), and iii) other Emperor penguin colonies in East Antarctica (with Dr Wienecke, AAD). Ongoing/future work will also evaluate the impact of abrupt change on the seals and penguins at Dumont d'Urville following the Mertz Glacier calving in February 2010.
author2 MASSOM, ROB (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
MASSOM, ROB (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems.
title_short Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems.
title_full Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems.
title_fullStr Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems.
title_full_unstemmed Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems.
title_sort remote sensing of near-coastal antarctic sea ice and its impacts on ice shelves and ecosystems.
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/remote-sensing-near-shelves-ecosystems/700106
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_3024
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-63.0; southlimit=-70.0; westlimit=-180.0; eastLimit=180.0; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 2008-09-30 to 2011-03-31
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.017,140.017,-66.667,-66.667)
ENVELOPE(140.013,140.013,-66.667,-66.667)
ENVELOPE(144.500,144.500,-67.667,-67.667)
ENVELOPE(-137.617,-137.617,-75.150,-75.150)
ENVELOPE(145.500,145.500,-67.167,-67.167)
ENVELOPE(-65.000,-65.000,-67.050,-67.050)
ENVELOPE(-180.0,180.0,-63.0,-70.0)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
East Antarctica
Weddell
Dumont d'Urville
Dumont-d'Urville
Mertz Glacier
Giles
Mertz Glacier Tongue
Fricker
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
East Antarctica
Weddell
Dumont d'Urville
Dumont-d'Urville
Mertz Glacier
Giles
Mertz Glacier Tongue
Fricker
genre Adelie Land
Adelie penguin
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Aptenodytes forsteri
East Antarctica
Emperor penguins
ice pack
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Iceberg*
Mertz Glacier
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
Weddell Seal
genre_facet Adelie Land
Adelie penguin
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Aptenodytes forsteri
East Antarctica
Emperor penguins
ice pack
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
Iceberg*
Mertz Glacier
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
Weddell Seal
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/remote-sensing-near-shelves-ecosystems/700106
2c7b9a5f-3543-48af-8cd9-27ba96d9f6fb
ASAC_3024
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_3024
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
_version_ 1766360092437905408
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::700106 2023-05-15T13:04:27+02:00 Remote Sensing of Near-Coastal Antarctic Sea Ice and Its Impacts on Ice Shelves and Ecosystems. MASSOM, ROB (hasPrincipalInvestigator) MASSOM, ROB (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-63.0; southlimit=-70.0; westlimit=-180.0; eastLimit=180.0; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 2008-09-30 to 2011-03-31 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/remote-sensing-near-shelves-ecosystems/700106 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_3024 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.ands.org.au/remote-sensing-near-shelves-ecosystems/700106 2c7b9a5f-3543-48af-8cd9-27ba96d9f6fb ASAC_3024 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_3024 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre biota oceans ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS EARTH SCIENCE CRYOSPHERE SEA ICE ICE EXTENT PENGUINS BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION ANIMALS/VERTEBRATES BIRDS remote sensing Emperor Penguin Fast Ice Ice Shelf ICESAT &gt Ice Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite RADARSAT-1 SATELLITES RADARSAT-2 ICESAT-2 &gt Cloud and land Elevation Satellite-2 OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN CONTINENT &gt ANTARCTICA GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR dataset ftands 2020-01-05T21:17:10Z Metadata record for data from AAS (ASAC) Project 3024. Public The proposed research will derive improved estimates of East Antarctic fast-ice extent and thickness, and their variability, from satellite data. These will be used to explicitly test relationships between fast ice/other environmental parameters and Emperor penguin population dynamics. We shall also combine observations with a wave-ice shelf-sea ice interaction model to test the hypothesis that catastrophic ice shelf break-up events on the E. Antarctic Peninsula are linked to increased ocean wave energy associated with sea-ice extent anomalies (driven by atmospheric anomalies), and/or long-period swell from far-remote storms. This work will aid comprehension of processes responsible for recent rapid ice-shelf demise. Project objectives: 1. To measure and monitor East Antarctic fast ice areal extent and thickness, and their spatio-temporal variability, using satellite remote sensing. 2) To analyse the impact of fast ice variability on the breeding success of Emperor penguins (Aptenodytes forsteri). 3) To investigate the potential impact of sea ice on recent ice shelf break-up breakup on the Antarctic Peninsula. Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: This project has shown a strong correlation between interannual fast ice variability and Emperor penguin breeding success at Dumont d'Urville, and has produced satellite-based maps of East Antarctic fast ice (radar snapshot mosaics from November 1997/98 and 20-day composite images for 2005-2008, extending back to 2000). Secondly, significant progress was made towards implicating an atmospherically-driven anomalous lack of sea ice in recent Antarctic ice-shelf disintegrations. Finally, new research highlights a previously-overlooked mechanical coupling between the floating Mertz Glacier tongue and very thick (greater than 25m) and old (greater than 20yrs) fast ice attached to it, with important implications for ice-sheet margin stability. Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: 1) To measure and monitor East Antarctic fast ice areal extent and thickness, and their spatio-temporal variability, using satellite remote sensing. Considerable progress has been made against this objective, building on last year's publication of the first detailed "snapshot" maps of landfast sea ice (fast ice) extent around the East Antarctic coast from 75 degrees E-170 degrees E for the Novembers of 1997 and 1999 using RADARSAT satellite ScanSAR images (see Giles et al., 2008). The main achievements are: * The development of an improved semi-automated method to successfully derive fast ice extent (and pack ice motion) from time series of Envisat Advanced SAR images (Giles et al., in prep.), via a project with the European Space Agency and the International Space Science Institute (Berne, Switzerland). Fast ice is identified as regions of zero motion in the cross-correlation analysis of carefully co-registered pairs of satellite SAR images. * Significant progress in the PhD project (Alex Fraser) aimed at deriving longer and near-continuous time series of fast ice extent from time series of NASA MODIS visible and thermal IR imagery at 1 km resolution. A major challenge has been to address the problem of effectively 'removing' persistent cloud cover from the images. This has been achieved by compositing many thousands of MODIS images to create 20-day composite images of the entire East Antarctic coastal zone from 10W to 170E. This technique was showcased at the prestigious International Geoscience and Remote Sensing 2009 conference in South Africa in July 2009 (Fraser et al., 2009a), with subsequent publication by Fraser et al. (2009b). During the year, this work resulted in an important new time series of fast ice extent that runs from 2000 to 2008 inclusive (Fraser et al., in prep.), with techniques being described in Fraser et al. (in press). This unique dataset represents by far the most detailed estimate of East Antarctic fast ice and its spatio-temporal variability to date. It furthermore represents an important new baseline against which to gauge change, given that Antarctic fast ice is a key yet poorly understood component of the global cryosphere (and ocean freshwater budget), is of immense ecological significance (see 2 below), and is a sensitive indicator of climate change/variability. This baseline is directly comparable to the more familiar overall sea ice (pack ice) extent product. Work is underway to determine why large regional differences occur in fast ice distribution and behaviour, including analysis of the role of bathymetry, grounded icebergs and changes in wind patterns. This work also provides crucial regional-scale fast ice information in support of detailed localised fast ice measurements carried out within the Antarctic Fast Ice network at Casey and Davis (AAS 3032). * A collaborative project has been established with Drs Fricker (USA) and Legresy (France) to estimate the thickness of a large region of perennial fast ice adjacent and attached to the Mertz Glacier Tongue. This has been achieved by combining satellite imagery with surface elevation data from the NASA's ICESat laser altimeter satellite, although current unknowns include the thickness and density of the overlying snowcover. The results suggest that this fast ice is extraordinarily thick i.e. greater than 25 m, and may be at least 20 years old (Massom et al., subm., a). Work examining the glaciological significance of this extremely thick fast ice is described in 3 (below). Work is also underway to evaluate the impact on this and regional fast ice of the major calving of the Mertz Glacier in February 2010. 2) To analyse the impact of fast ice variability on the breeding success of Emperor penguins The first element of this multi-disciplinary, international study was completed last year i.e. a case study showing strong links between Emperor penguin breeding success at Dumont d'Urville and fast ice distribution along the Adelie Land coast of East Antarctica and its variability due to variability in the regional wind field. Results were published in Marine Ecology Progress Series (Massom et al., 2009a), and were also presented in a keynote address to the Xth SCAR International Biology Symposium in September 2009. Work is underway to extend this study both temporally and to other species and regions, using the new MODIS-derived time series of 20-day composite maps of fast ice extent (see 1 above). This work will include a comparison of the fast ice information with new data from French penguin scientists (Drs Barbraud, Ancel and LeMayo) on Emperor penguin mortality and other demographic parameters, with a view to discovering links between the penguin demographics and fast ice variability due to changing weather patterns. Further work is in its initial stages to study the impact of fast ice variability on i) Weddell seal foraging behaviour (with Dr Hindell's group at the Univ. of Tasmania), ii) Adelie penguin breeding success and foraging behaviour (with Drs Southwell and Emmerson, AAD), and iii) other Emperor penguin colonies in East Antarctica (with Dr Wienecke, AAD). Ongoing/future work will also evaluate the impact of abrupt change on the seals and penguins at Dumont d'Urville following the Mertz Glacier calving in February 2010. Dataset Adelie Land Adelie penguin Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica Aptenodytes forsteri East Antarctica Emperor penguins ice pack Ice Sheet Ice Shelf Ice Shelves Iceberg* Mertz Glacier Sea ice Southern Ocean Weddell Seal Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula East Antarctica Weddell Dumont d'Urville ENVELOPE(140.017,140.017,-66.667,-66.667) Dumont-d'Urville ENVELOPE(140.013,140.013,-66.667,-66.667) Mertz Glacier ENVELOPE(144.500,144.500,-67.667,-67.667) Giles ENVELOPE(-137.617,-137.617,-75.150,-75.150) Mertz Glacier Tongue ENVELOPE(145.500,145.500,-67.167,-67.167) Fricker ENVELOPE(-65.000,-65.000,-67.050,-67.050) ENVELOPE(-180.0,180.0,-63.0,-70.0)