Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats

The JRC explores the potentials of a satellite-derived index (the Ocean Productivity index for Fish - OPFish) at large scale to represent the production of high tropic level communities (fish) and its variability after currently observed climate change during the period 2003-2016 in the Arctic Ocean...

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Main Author: DRUON Jean-Noel
Language:English
Published: Publications Office of the European Union 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC109947
https://doi.org/10.2760/28033
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spelling ftjrc:oai:publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu:JRC109947 2024-09-15T17:53:23+00:00 Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats DRUON Jean-Noel 2017 Online https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC109947 https://doi.org/10.2760/28033 eng eng Publications Office of the European Union JRC109947 2017 ftjrc https://doi.org/10.2760/28033 2024-07-22T04:42:15Z The JRC explores the potentials of a satellite-derived index (the Ocean Productivity index for Fish - OPFish) at large scale to represent the production of high tropic level communities (fish) and its variability after currently observed climate change during the period 2003-2016 in the Arctic Ocean. The OPFish uses the daily detection of productive oceanic features (chlorophyll-a [CHL] fronts) from ocean colour satellite sensors at 1/24-degree resolution as a proxy for food availability to fish populations. These productive features, such as eddies or gyres, were shown to attract fish and top predators as they are active long enough (from weeks to months) to allow the development of mesozooplankton populations. Potentially eutrophic waters are excluded by removing high daily levels of surface chlorophyll-a contents (daily surface content above 10 mg CHL.m-3). The satellite monitoring of productive fronts associated with day length in the OPFish formulation provide insight on the overall capacity of the marine environment to sustain high trophic level communities. Time-series and trends of OPFish identify current climate change impacts on potential fish productivity, including seasonal deviations, which may affect fish growth and recruitment. The annual climatology levels of OPFish between 2003 and 2016 were assessed setting zero value in months of permanent night (mostly from November to February) and monthly means of index values for periods of long-day duration (mostly from May to September) filtering out low coverage of CHL due to low-light levels, ice and clouds. The climatology of OPFish in the ice-free of the Arctic Ocean, an area mostly over the continental shelf and shelf-break, displayed lower levels and more uneven distribution than in temperate shelves (e.g. North-East Atlantic) with absolute values ranging from 20 to 50% compared to 45-55% respectively. The trends of OPFish on the 2003-2016 period showed about four-fold higher regional variability and levels in the Arctic compared to the North-East ... Other/Unknown Material Arctic Ocean Climate change North East Atlantic Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository
op_collection_id ftjrc
language English
description The JRC explores the potentials of a satellite-derived index (the Ocean Productivity index for Fish - OPFish) at large scale to represent the production of high tropic level communities (fish) and its variability after currently observed climate change during the period 2003-2016 in the Arctic Ocean. The OPFish uses the daily detection of productive oceanic features (chlorophyll-a [CHL] fronts) from ocean colour satellite sensors at 1/24-degree resolution as a proxy for food availability to fish populations. These productive features, such as eddies or gyres, were shown to attract fish and top predators as they are active long enough (from weeks to months) to allow the development of mesozooplankton populations. Potentially eutrophic waters are excluded by removing high daily levels of surface chlorophyll-a contents (daily surface content above 10 mg CHL.m-3). The satellite monitoring of productive fronts associated with day length in the OPFish formulation provide insight on the overall capacity of the marine environment to sustain high trophic level communities. Time-series and trends of OPFish identify current climate change impacts on potential fish productivity, including seasonal deviations, which may affect fish growth and recruitment. The annual climatology levels of OPFish between 2003 and 2016 were assessed setting zero value in months of permanent night (mostly from November to February) and monthly means of index values for periods of long-day duration (mostly from May to September) filtering out low coverage of CHL due to low-light levels, ice and clouds. The climatology of OPFish in the ice-free of the Arctic Ocean, an area mostly over the continental shelf and shelf-break, displayed lower levels and more uneven distribution than in temperate shelves (e.g. North-East Atlantic) with absolute values ranging from 20 to 50% compared to 45-55% respectively. The trends of OPFish on the 2003-2016 period showed about four-fold higher regional variability and levels in the Arctic compared to the North-East ...
author DRUON Jean-Noel
spellingShingle DRUON Jean-Noel
Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats
author_facet DRUON Jean-Noel
author_sort DRUON Jean-Noel
title Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats
title_short Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats
title_full Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats
title_fullStr Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats
title_full_unstemmed Ocean Productivity index for Fish in the Arctic Ocean: Initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats
title_sort ocean productivity index for fish in the arctic ocean: initial assessment of satellite-derived plankton-to-fish productive habitats
publisher Publications Office of the European Union
publishDate 2017
url https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC109947
https://doi.org/10.2760/28033
genre Arctic Ocean
Climate change
North East Atlantic
genre_facet Arctic Ocean
Climate change
North East Atlantic
op_relation JRC109947
op_doi https://doi.org/10.2760/28033
_version_ 1810295471308013568