An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe

Nearly half of the earth’s photosynthetically fixed carbon derives from the oceans. To determine global and region specific rates, we rely on models that estimate marine net primary productivity (NPP) thus it is essential that these models are evaluated to determine their accuracy. Here we assessed...

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Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Saba, VS, Friedrichs, MAM, Antoine, D, Armstrong, RA, Asanuma, I, Behrenfeld, MJ, Ciotti, AM, Dowell, M, Hoepffner, N, Hyde, KJW, Ishizaka, J, Kameda, T, Marra, J, Mélin, F, Morel, A, O'Reilly, J, Smith J.r. , WO, Smyth, TJ, Tang, S, Uitz, J, Waters, K, Westberry, TK, SCARDI, MICHELE
Other Authors: Saba, V, Friedrichs, M, Armstrong, R, Behrenfeld, M, Ciotti, A, Hyde, K, Mélin, F, Scardi, M, Smith J. r., W, Smyth, T, Westberry, T
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: country:DE 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2108/15207
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-489-2011
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spelling ftunivromatorver:oai:art.torvergata.it:2108/15207 2024-02-27T08:33:10+00:00 An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe Saba, VS Friedrichs, MAM Antoine, D Armstrong, RA Asanuma, I Behrenfeld, MJ Ciotti, AM Dowell, M Hoepffner, N Hyde, KJW Ishizaka, J Kameda, T Marra, J Mélin, F Morel, A O'Reilly, J Smith J.r. , WO Smyth, TJ Tang, S Uitz, J Waters, K Westberry, TK SCARDI, MICHELE Saba, V Friedrichs, M Antoine, D Armstrong, R Asanuma, I Behrenfeld, M Ciotti, A Dowell, M Hoepffner, N Hyde, K Ishizaka, J Kameda, T Marra, J Mélin, F Morel, A O'Reilly, J Scardi, M Smith J. r., W Smyth, T Tang, S Uitz, J Waters, K Westberry, T 2011 http://hdl.handle.net/2108/15207 https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-489-2011 eng eng country:DE info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/000287796800018 volume:8 firstpage:489 lastpage:503 journal:BIOGEOSCIENCES http://hdl.handle.net/2108/15207 doi:10.5194/bg-8-489-2011 info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-79952025167 www.biogeosciences.net/8/489/2011/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2011 ftunivromatorver https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-489-2011 2024-01-31T00:03:19Z Nearly half of the earth’s photosynthetically fixed carbon derives from the oceans. To determine global and region specific rates, we rely on models that estimate marine net primary productivity (NPP) thus it is essential that these models are evaluated to determine their accuracy. Here we assessed the skill of 21 ocean color models by comparing their estimates of depth-integrated NPP to 1156 in situ 14C measurements encompassing ten marine regions including the Sargasso Sea, pelagic North Atlantic, coastal Northeast Atlantic, Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Arabian Sea, sub-tropical North Pacific, Ross Sea, West Antarctic Peninsula, and the Antarctic Polar Frontal Zone. Average model skill, as determined by root-mean square difference calculations, was lowest in the Black and Mediterranean Seas, highest in the pelagic North Atlantic and the Antarctic Polar Frontal Zone, and intermediate in the other six regions. The maximum fraction of model skill that may be attributable to uncertainties in both the input variables and in situ NPP measurements was nearly 72%. On average, the simplest depth/wavelength integrated models performed no worse than the more complex depth/wavelength resolved models. Ocean color models were not highly challenged in extreme conditions of surface chlorophyll-a and sea surface temperature, nor in high-nitrate low-chlorophyll waters. Water column depth was the primary influence on ocean color model performance such that average skill was significantly higher at depths greater than 250m, suggesting that ocean color models are more challenged in Case-2 waters (coastal) than in Case-1 (pelagic) waters. Given that in situ chlorophyll-a data was used as input data, algorithm improvement is required to eliminate the poor performance of ocean color NPP models in Case-2 waters that are close to coastlines. Finally, ocean color chlorophyll-a algorithms are challenged by optically complex Case-2 waters, thus using satellite-derived chlorophyll-a to estimate NPP in coastal areas would likely further ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula North Atlantic Northeast Atlantic Ross Sea Universitá degli Studi di Roma "Tor Vergata": ART - Archivio Istituzionale della Ricerca Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Ross Sea The Antarctic Biogeosciences 8 2 489 503
institution Open Polar
collection Universitá degli Studi di Roma "Tor Vergata": ART - Archivio Istituzionale della Ricerca
op_collection_id ftunivromatorver
language English
topic Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA
spellingShingle Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA
Saba, VS
Friedrichs, MAM
Antoine, D
Armstrong, RA
Asanuma, I
Behrenfeld, MJ
Ciotti, AM
Dowell, M
Hoepffner, N
Hyde, KJW
Ishizaka, J
Kameda, T
Marra, J
Mélin, F
Morel, A
O'Reilly, J
Smith J.r. , WO
Smyth, TJ
Tang, S
Uitz, J
Waters, K
Westberry, TK
SCARDI, MICHELE
An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe
topic_facet Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA
description Nearly half of the earth’s photosynthetically fixed carbon derives from the oceans. To determine global and region specific rates, we rely on models that estimate marine net primary productivity (NPP) thus it is essential that these models are evaluated to determine their accuracy. Here we assessed the skill of 21 ocean color models by comparing their estimates of depth-integrated NPP to 1156 in situ 14C measurements encompassing ten marine regions including the Sargasso Sea, pelagic North Atlantic, coastal Northeast Atlantic, Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Arabian Sea, sub-tropical North Pacific, Ross Sea, West Antarctic Peninsula, and the Antarctic Polar Frontal Zone. Average model skill, as determined by root-mean square difference calculations, was lowest in the Black and Mediterranean Seas, highest in the pelagic North Atlantic and the Antarctic Polar Frontal Zone, and intermediate in the other six regions. The maximum fraction of model skill that may be attributable to uncertainties in both the input variables and in situ NPP measurements was nearly 72%. On average, the simplest depth/wavelength integrated models performed no worse than the more complex depth/wavelength resolved models. Ocean color models were not highly challenged in extreme conditions of surface chlorophyll-a and sea surface temperature, nor in high-nitrate low-chlorophyll waters. Water column depth was the primary influence on ocean color model performance such that average skill was significantly higher at depths greater than 250m, suggesting that ocean color models are more challenged in Case-2 waters (coastal) than in Case-1 (pelagic) waters. Given that in situ chlorophyll-a data was used as input data, algorithm improvement is required to eliminate the poor performance of ocean color NPP models in Case-2 waters that are close to coastlines. Finally, ocean color chlorophyll-a algorithms are challenged by optically complex Case-2 waters, thus using satellite-derived chlorophyll-a to estimate NPP in coastal areas would likely further ...
author2 Saba, V
Friedrichs, M
Antoine, D
Armstrong, R
Asanuma, I
Behrenfeld, M
Ciotti, A
Dowell, M
Hoepffner, N
Hyde, K
Ishizaka, J
Kameda, T
Marra, J
Mélin, F
Morel, A
O'Reilly, J
Scardi, M
Smith J. r., W
Smyth, T
Tang, S
Uitz, J
Waters, K
Westberry, T
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Saba, VS
Friedrichs, MAM
Antoine, D
Armstrong, RA
Asanuma, I
Behrenfeld, MJ
Ciotti, AM
Dowell, M
Hoepffner, N
Hyde, KJW
Ishizaka, J
Kameda, T
Marra, J
Mélin, F
Morel, A
O'Reilly, J
Smith J.r. , WO
Smyth, TJ
Tang, S
Uitz, J
Waters, K
Westberry, TK
SCARDI, MICHELE
author_facet Saba, VS
Friedrichs, MAM
Antoine, D
Armstrong, RA
Asanuma, I
Behrenfeld, MJ
Ciotti, AM
Dowell, M
Hoepffner, N
Hyde, KJW
Ishizaka, J
Kameda, T
Marra, J
Mélin, F
Morel, A
O'Reilly, J
Smith J.r. , WO
Smyth, TJ
Tang, S
Uitz, J
Waters, K
Westberry, TK
SCARDI, MICHELE
author_sort Saba, VS
title An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe
title_short An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe
title_full An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe
title_fullStr An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe
title_full_unstemmed An evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe
title_sort evaluation of ocean color model estimates of marine primary productivity in coastal and pelagic regions across the globe
publisher country:DE
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2108/15207
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-489-2011
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Pacific
Ross Sea
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Pacific
Ross Sea
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
North Atlantic
Northeast Atlantic
Ross Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
North Atlantic
Northeast Atlantic
Ross Sea
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/000287796800018
volume:8
firstpage:489
lastpage:503
journal:BIOGEOSCIENCES
http://hdl.handle.net/2108/15207
doi:10.5194/bg-8-489-2011
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-79952025167
www.biogeosciences.net/8/489/2011/
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-489-2011
container_title Biogeosciences
container_volume 8
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container_start_page 489
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