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Constraining the Oceanic Uptake and Fluxes of Greenhouse Gases by Building an Ocean Network of Certified Stations : The Ocean Component of the Integrated Carbon Observation System, ICOS-Oceans

Authors :
Steinhoff, Tobias
Gkritzalis, Thanos
Lauvset, Siv K.
Jones, Steve
Schuster, Ute
Olsen, Are
Becker, Meike
Bozzano, Roberto
Brunetti, Fabio
Cantoni, Carolina
Cardin, Vanessa
Diverres, Denis
Fiedler, Bjoern
Fransson, Agneta
Giani, Michele
Hartman, Sue
Hoppema, Mario
Jeansson, Emil
Johannessen, Truls
Kitidis, Vassilis
Körtzinger, Arne
Landa, Camilla
Lefevre, Nathalie
Luchetta, Anna
Naudts, Lieven
Nightingale, Philip D.
Omar, Abdirahman M.
Pensieri, Sara
Pfeil, Benjamin
Castano-Primo, Rocio
Rehder, Gregor
Rutgersson, Anna
Sanders, Richard
Schewe, Ingo
Siena, Giuseppe
Skjelvan, Ingunn
Soltwedel, Thomas
van Heuven, Steven
Watson, Andrew
Steinhoff, Tobias
Gkritzalis, Thanos
Lauvset, Siv K.
Jones, Steve
Schuster, Ute
Olsen, Are
Becker, Meike
Bozzano, Roberto
Brunetti, Fabio
Cantoni, Carolina
Cardin, Vanessa
Diverres, Denis
Fiedler, Bjoern
Fransson, Agneta
Giani, Michele
Hartman, Sue
Hoppema, Mario
Jeansson, Emil
Johannessen, Truls
Kitidis, Vassilis
Körtzinger, Arne
Landa, Camilla
Lefevre, Nathalie
Luchetta, Anna
Naudts, Lieven
Nightingale, Philip D.
Omar, Abdirahman M.
Pensieri, Sara
Pfeil, Benjamin
Castano-Primo, Rocio
Rehder, Gregor
Rutgersson, Anna
Sanders, Richard
Schewe, Ingo
Siena, Giuseppe
Skjelvan, Ingunn
Soltwedel, Thomas
van Heuven, Steven
Watson, Andrew
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The European Research Infrastructure Consortium "Integrated Carbon Observation System" (ICOS) aims at delivering high quality greenhouse gas (GHG) observations and derived data products (e.g., regional GHG-flux maps) for constraining the GHG balance on a European level, on a sustained long-term basis. The marine domain (ICOS-Oceans) currently consists of 11 Ship of Opportunity lines (SOOP - Ship of Opportunity Program) and 10 Fixed Ocean Stations (FOSs) spread across European waters, including the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and the Barents, North, Baltic, and Mediterranean Seas. The stations operate in a harmonized and standardized way based on community-proven protocols and methods for ocean GHG observations, improving operational conformity as well as quality control and assurance of the data. This enables the network to focus on long term research into the marine carbon cycle and the anthropogenic carbon sink, while preparing the network to include other GHG fluxes. ICOS data are processed on a near real-time basis and will be published on the ICOS Carbon Portal (CP), allowing monthly estimates of CO2 air-sea exchange to be quantified for European waters. ICOS establishes transparent operational data management routines following the FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) guiding principles allowing amongst others reproducibility, interoperability, and traceability. The ICOS-Oceans network is actively integrating with the atmospheric (e.g., improved atmospheric measurements onboard SOOP lines) and ecosystem (e.g., oceanic direct gas flux measurements) domains of ICOS, and utilizes techniques developed by the ICOS Central Facilities and the CP. There is a strong interaction with the international ocean carbon cycle community to enhance interoperability and harmonize data flow. The future vision of ICOS-Oceans includes ship-based ocean survey sections to obtain a three-dimensional understanding of marine carbon cycle processes and optimize t

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234036412
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389.fmars.2019.00544