Global maps of Forel-Ule index, hue angle and Secchi disk depth derived from twenty-one years of monthly ESA-OC-CCI data

We document the development and public release of a new dataset (1997–2018), consisting of global maps of the Forel-Ule index, hue angle and Secchi disk depth. Source data comes from the European Space Agency (ESA) Ocean Colour (OC) Climate Change Initiative (CCI), which is providing merged multi-se...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pitarch, Jaime, Bellacicco, Marco, Marullo, Salvatore, Woerd, Hendrik J.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2020-316
https://essd.copernicus.org/preprints/essd-2020-316/
Description
Summary:We document the development and public release of a new dataset (1997–2018), consisting of global maps of the Forel-Ule index, hue angle and Secchi disk depth. Source data comes from the European Space Agency (ESA) Ocean Colour (OC) Climate Change Initiative (CCI), which is providing merged multi-sensor data from the mid-resolution sensors in operation at a specific time from 1997 to the present day. Multi-sensor satellite datasets are advantageous tools for ecological studies because they increase the probabilities of cloud-free data over a given region, as data from multiple satellites whose overpass times differ by a few hours are combined. Moreover, data merging from heritage and present satellites can expand the duration of the time series indefinitely, which allows the calculation of significant trends. Additionally, data are remapped consistently and analysis-ready for scientists. Also, the products described in this article have the exclusive advantage of being linkable to in-situ historic observations and thus enabling the construction of very long time series. Monthly data are presented at a spatial resolution of ~4 km at the equator and are available at PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.904266 (Pitarch et al., 2019a). Two smaller and easier to handle test datasets have been produced from the former: a global dataset at 1 degree spatial resolution and another one for the North Atlantic at 0.25 degree resolution.