environmental remote sensing in the great lakes and oceans by arthur s. brooks professor emeritus of...

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Environmental Remote Sensing in Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans The Great Lakes and Oceans By By Arthur S. Brooks Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies Center for Great Lakes Studies University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee April 27, 2010 April 27, 2010

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Page 1: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Environmental Remote Sensing inEnvironmental Remote Sensing in

The Great Lakes and OceansThe Great Lakes and Oceans

ByBy

Arthur S. BrooksArthur S. Brooks

Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences andProfessor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and

Center for Great Lakes StudiesCenter for Great Lakes Studies

University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

April 27, 2010April 27, 2010

Page 2: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

EARTH: THE WATER PLANET

Page 3: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

EARTH: THE WATER PLANET

Page 4: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

WHERE IS ALL THE WATER TODAY ??

•THE OCEANS 1,348 M kmTHE OCEANS 1,348 M km33

Page 5: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

WHERE IS ALL THE WATER TODAY ??

• THE OCEANS 1,348 M km3• ICE CAPS & GLACIERS 29 M kmICE CAPS & GLACIERS 29 M km33

Page 6: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

WHERE IS ALL THE WATER TODAY ??

• THE OCEANS 1,348 M km3

• ICE CAPS & GLACIERS 29 M km3

• GROUNDWATER 8.0 M kmGROUNDWATER 8.0 M km33

Page 7: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

WHERE IS ALL THE WATER TODAY ??

• THE OCEANS 1,348 M km3

• ICE CAPS & GLACIERS 29 M km3

• GROUNDWATER 8.0 M km3• THE ATMOSPHERE 0.5 M km3

Page 8: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

WHERE IS ALL THE WATER TODAY ??

• THE OCEANS 1,348 M km3

• ICE CAPS & GLACIERS 29 M km3

• GROUNDWATER 8.0 M km3• THE ATMOSPHERE 0.5 M km3• SURFACE FRESHWATER 0.2 M kmSURFACE FRESHWATER 0.2 M km33

Page 9: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

COMPRESS ALL THE WATER in the World

INTO A ONE LITER BOTTLE

Page 10: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

ALL IN ONE LITER (1000 ml)

• 974.7 ml (97.5%) SALTWATER

• 25.3 ml (2.5%) FRESH WATER

Page 11: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Oceans are fun, but lakes taste a lot better!Oceans are fun, but lakes taste a lot better!

Page 12: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

ALL FRESHWATER (25.3 ml)

17.6 ml ICE CAPS AND GLACIERS 7.6 ml GROUNDWATER 0.1 ml SURFACE WATER (2 drops)

Page 13: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

SURFACE FRESHWATER0.1 ml (2 DROPS)

0.02 ml (20%) LAKE BAIKAL (RUSSIA) 0.02 ml (20%) OUR GREAT LAKES 0.06 ml (60%) ALL OTHER RIVERS

AND LAKES

Page 14: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 15: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 16: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 17: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 18: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 19: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 20: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 21: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

The Coastal Zone Color Scanner (CZCS) is a sensor specifically developed to study ocean color properties. These properties can be related to organic content, such as

plankton, as well as sediment. CZCS launched in October 1978, as part of Nimbus-7's instrument complement and continued to operate until late 1986. It sensed colors in the visible region in four bands, each 0.02 µm in bandwidth, centered at 0.44 (1), 0.52 (2),

0.57 (3), and 0.67 (4) µm. A fifth band between 0.7 and 0.8 µm monitored surface vegetation and band six, at 10.5-12.5 µm sensed sea surface temperatures. Here is the

first CZCS before fitting onto the Nimbus spacecraft:

Page 22: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 23: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 24: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

CZCS distribution of chlorophyll on a global scale averaged between 1978 and 1986

Page 25: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)

-integrated on the Terra (EOS AM-1) and Aqua (EOS PM-1) spacecraft

Page 26: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

MODIS, for Moderate (resolution) Imaging Spectrometer, covers usually large areas, such as the Black Sea shown here:

Page 27: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

A recent image from Terra's MODIS, using bands at 11 and 12 µm, shows how sharp the temperature contrast can be between the main Gulf stream (red)

and surrounding waters:

Page 28: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Another MODIS image of the warm Gulf Stream emphasizes its tendency to meander as it moves northward:

Page 29: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

In the color coding, blues correspond to the lowest levels of phytoplankton and reds to the highest. Note the eddies or rings. Phytoplankton tends to concentrate along the edges of warm core rings (which rotate clockwise) but concentrate centrally in cold core rings (counterclockwise motion).

Page 30: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

The MODIS instrument on Aqua picked out a large phytoplankton bloom off the northern coast of Norway on July 19, 2003. Most of the blue-green color in the (near true color) image below was found to be due to plankton whose shells) are composed of chalky

Calcium carbonate (CaCO3.)

Page 31: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

SeaWiFS (Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-View Sensor), launched on August 1, 1997. The sensor system monitors ocean color variations, especially those caused by concentrations of plankton and other sea life. Thus, the prime objectives are: 1) to quantify ocean plankton production; 2) to determine observable couplings of physical/biological processes; and 3) to characterize estuarine and coastal ecosystems. The SeaWiFS sensor consists of eight channels at: 412, 443, 490, 510, 555, 670, 765, and 865 nm, each with bandwidths of 20 or 40 nm. From an orbital altitude of 705 km, spatial resolution is about 1.1 km.

Page 32: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

On SeaWiFS, several bands cover the blue, green, and red parts of the visible spectrum, and into the near infrared, yielding data that can be used to display variations in ocean color or, for particular bands, indications of the distribution and intensity of chlorophyll that resides mainly in surficial plankton. This SeaWiFS image maps the generalized ocean colors as well as chlorphyll concentrations (in red, yellow, and orange colors) on a near global scale during September, 1997.

On SeaWiFS, several bands cover the blue, green, and red parts of the visible spectrum, and into the near infrared, yielding data that can be used to display variations in ocean color or, for particular bands, indications of the distribution and intensity of chlorophyll that resides mainly in surficial plankton. This SeaWiFS image maps the generalized ocean colors as well as chlorphyll concentrations (in red, yellow, and orange colors) on a near global scale.

Page 33: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

SeaWiFS produces regional scale images in which eddies and circulation patterns are evident. In this view of western North America, marine eddies have formed off the British Columbia coast around Queen Charlotte; to the west is another eddy-like pattern made by clouds.

Page 34: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Red Tide occurred north of the Florida Keys in 2002, as seen in this SeaWiFs image that renders the red algae in almost natural color;

Key West

Page 35: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

In Situ Validation Data

Drifting Buoys

Right - Explorer cruise tracks that provide bias reference using M-AERI observationsLower Left - Drifting buoys, used to compute SST equation retrieval coefficientsLower Right - Global M-AERI cruise tracks, final validation suite

•TERRA and AQUA SST and SST4 products show similar behavior with respect to in situ retrievals to date

Page 36: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Balch/Campbell - Gulf of Maine Ferry Comparisons

Page 37: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

J. Campbell et al.

Dec 10 2000 SeaWiFS - MODIS Chlorophyll Comparisons

Sea

WiF

S C

hlor

ophy

ll a

MODIS Chlorophyll a

Page 38: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

SCIENCE QUESTIONS (Ocean NPP)

This Product Derives Ocean Net Primary Production and Annual Export Production from Chlorophyll, Light (PAR), SST, and Mixed Layer Depth

Carbon fixed/m2/day - Needed to understand: Magnitude and Variability of ONPP, and uncertainties. Ecosystem dynamics (coupling with physical forcings) Food chain effects (fisheries resources) Carbon cycle (carbon export, pCO2 and hence air sea C flux)

RELEVANT SCIENCE QUESTIONS for ONPPVariability - How are global ecosystems changing? Response - How do ecosystems respond to and affect global environmental change and the carbon cycle?

Page 39: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

.01 0.1 1.0 10. 20.Chlorophyll a (mg m-3)

Chlor_MODIS (Clark)Chlorophyll-a (empirical)

Chlor_a_2Chlorophyll-a (SeaWiFS analog)OC3M OReilly et al

Chlor_a_3 (Carder)Chlorophyll-a (semi-analytic)Input for ONPP, Fluorescence Efficiency

December, 2000

Page 40: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Weekly PAR December 10, 2000

Derived from GSFC Data Assimilation Office GEOS 3.2.5 3 hr retrievals.

Page 41: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

MODIS SST December 10, 2000

MODIS Daytime 11-12 m SST D1 Also used for Chlorophyll nut depletion Temp.

Page 42: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Mixed Layer Depth Dec. 10, 2000

Mixed Layer Depth is averaged from daily values retreived by Fleet Numerical Monterey Oceanographic Center’s (FNMOC) OTIS model, obtained through NOAA-Navy net by GES DAAC.

Page 43: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

P1Behrenfeld-Falkowski

P2HowardYoderRyan

Dec 10-18,2000 3.3.1

Page 44: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Name the Great Lakes ?

Page 45: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

H O M E S

Page 46: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Name the Great Lakes ?

Huron

Page 47: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Name the Great Lakes ?

Ontario

Huron

Page 48: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Name the Great Lakes ?

Michigan

Huron

Ontario

Page 49: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Name the Great Lakes ?

Michigan

Huron

Ontario

Erie

Page 50: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Name the Great Lakes ?

Michigan

Huron

Ontario

Erie

Superior

Page 51: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 52: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

THE GREAT LAKES HYDROLOGIC CYCLE

Page 53: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Underwater Processes

Invisible From Space

Page 54: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Properties of Water –

Temperature vs. Density

Lightest

Heaviest

Ice Floats

Maximum Density at

4 C

Page 55: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 56: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Offshore Migration

Of the

Thermal Front in

Lake Ontario

Spring 1965

Page 57: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Northward and Outward Advancement of

The Thermal Front

May 6 --- June 2 1992

Page 58: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 59: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 60: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 61: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 62: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 63: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

UWM RV NEESKAY

Page 64: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 65: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 66: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 67: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 68: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 69: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 70: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 71: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Nutrients: Silicon Nitrogen Phosphorus

Diatoms (algae) Spring Bloom

Sunlight

Stylized Annual Primary Production and Nutrient Cycles

Page 72: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Thermal stratification forms:

Late May 1973 and Late June 1974

40% Greater Chlorophyll Biomass in 1974 with longer mixing period

Interannual Differences in Primary Production 1973-1974

Page 73: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

Primary Production for Lake Michigan

Summer

Lake Mixing

Nutrients P,N, Si

Light Increasing

Lake

Mixing

Light

Decreasing

Spring Algae Bloom

-Lake Stratified-

Fall

Brooks and Zastrow 2000

Page 74: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

135 Days225 Days

102-125 [113]

104-129 [116]

Page 75: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies
Page 76: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies

http://coastwatch.glerl.noaa.gov/glsea/movies/p365days.flc

Page 77: Environmental Remote Sensing in The Great Lakes and Oceans By Arthur S. Brooks Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences and Center for Great Lakes Studies