introducing an integrated marine observing system for australia (imos)

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Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS) . Gary Meyers (IMOS Director) and John Middleton (SAIMOS)

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Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS). Gary Meyers (IMOS Director) and John Middleton (SAIMOS). IMOS Strategic Goal. Assemble and provide free, open and timely access to streams of data that support research on The role of the oceans in the climate system - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

.

Gary Meyers (IMOS Director) and John Middleton (SAIMOS)

Page 2: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

IMOS Strategic GoalAssemble and provide free, open and timely access to streams of data that support research on• The role of the oceans in the climate system• The interaction between major boundary currents and shelf environments and ecosystems

And in the longer term• Supports policy development, management of marine and terrestrial climate impacts and adaptation by industries

Page 3: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

IMOS Funding:

• $50M cash from Commonwealth

• Additional $40M cash and in-kind support from marine agencies around Australia

IMOS Development:

• National Science Plan priorities workshopped in 2006

• Local science plans (with equipment needs) developed

• Envelopes for equipment allocations developed

• Agreement of who runs what facilities and what “nodes” are allocated facilities.

• Plan strongly supported and funded by Aust. Govt. National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy

Page 4: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

IMOS—5 Nodes and 11 FacilitiesGoals: onshore-offshore interaction, climate impacts

GBROOS

NSWIMOSSAIMOS

WAIMOS

Page 5: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Water depth 110 m

ADCP

Met Station

Communications via acoustic modem

National Reference Stations

Key components:Real Time Data sent via satellite 2x CTDs1x ADCP (SAIMOS, NSWIMOS only)1x Surface Meteorological Station

Page 6: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Reference Stations

RS

RS

Page 7: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

National Reference Station - Monthly Biogeochemical Sampling

1. Carbon Parameters: Dissolved Inorganic Carbon, Alkalinity

2. Hydrochemical parameters: Nitrate/nitrite, silicate,phosphate, salinity

3. Biological parameters: Phytoplankton: pigment composition, microscopy, genetic composition, total suspended solids

Flow cytometry (population size, physical and chemical composition)

Zooplankton: dry Weights, community composition, genetic composition

4. Physical/profiling instrument measurements: CTD with capabilities for:

Temperature, Pressure (depths), Conductivity, Fluorescence, Light (PAR), Turbidity, Dissolved Oxygen

Page 8: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Aust. Coastal Ocean RADAR Network – six systems (WERA&CODAR)

WERA Installation

Radar is back reflected by ocean waves. The Doppler shift in Radar frequencies enables surface currents and other variables to be measured.

Page 9: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Live current measurements every 30 minutes from the WERA system off South Carolina (US).

Strong North-East Velocities associated with the Gulf Stream are clearly visible

Note: range is better during day

HF Ocean RADAR Example From South Carolina

Page 10: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Aust. National Facility for Ocean Gliders

8 gliders (Slocum and deep)

Page 11: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Glider Cross-Section: Temperature Off Perth

Play Movie

Page 12: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Other IMOS observing systemsPassive acoustic listening for sea-floor slumps, Antarctic Ice collapse and marine mammals using hydrophones

AUV (hulls removed) for sea floor video and mapping

Pygmy Whale singing off Perth

Page 13: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Tagged Fish: AATAMS and community receivers

Moorings detect tagged fish < 1km

6 month service to obtain data

SAIMOS

Glenelg 10 moorings

Portland 31 moorings

Page 14: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Bluewater Node:

Major research questions:• What is the role of the ocean in weather, climate variability and change?

• What role does the ocean play in setting atmospheric carbon levels?

• Where and how does ocean and climate variability impact on pelagic ecosystems, their productivity and fisheries?

• How do large-scale offshore changes affect our coastal environment and ecosystems?

• Is there predictability in the system and where? On what timescales?

Tools

• ARGO Floats

• Ships of Opportunity

• Satellites

• S.O. Mooring

Page 15: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

IMOS Argo

• 50 T/S Argo floats per year (assuming a continuation of existing contributions from AGO, CSIRO and BoM)

Page 16: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Implementation

Page 17: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Jurien Bay

Perth Canyon Rottnest

Island

0 200km

West Australian IMOS

• Leeuwin Current eddies and their interaction with the shelf waters.

• Western Rock lobster recruitment• The Perth Canyon – highest biodiversity with whale

and fish aggregations, high primary and secondary production which are controlled by the physical oceanographic processes Leeuwin Current

Leeuwin UC

Page 18: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

• Summer:

• Upwelling - Deep cold, water is brought to surface

• Mechanisms: winds

• canyons

• Flinders Current

• Winter:

• Density current outflows from gulfs and coast

Sea Surface Temperature from satellite measurements

Southern Australian IMOS- cross shelf exchange/ecosystems

Page 19: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Planned Planned SAIMOS SAIMOS Infrastructure:Infrastructure:

Shelf/Slope Moorings

Reference Station

• CTD Stations

HF Radar

PLUS

• Gliders

• Fish tag curtains

• AUVs

Page 20: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

NSW IMOS – The EAC and upwelling:

Oke & Middleton 02

Page 21: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Climate change (East Coast, Tasmania) …

Mean surface salinity (ppt)After Hill et al. 2007

Me

an

se

a su

rfa

ce te

mpe

ratu

re (

deg

C)

Page 22: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

Great Great Barrier Barrier Reef Reef Ocean Ocean ObservinObserving Systemg System

GBROOSGBROOS

Issues for GBR function and healthIssues for GBR function and health

Connectivity (currents)Connectivity (currents)Productivity (upwelling)Productivity (upwelling)Coral bleaching (temperature)Coral bleaching (temperature)Coral calcification (carbonate chemistry)Coral calcification (carbonate chemistry)

Page 23: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

SEC

EAC

SEC

SEC = South Equatorial Current

EAC = East Australian Current

Coral Sea mooring (1)

Slope moorings (4)

Shelf mooring (1)

Oceanographic buoys (3)

Island Research Stations (4)

Reef towers (3)

HF Radar

Temp/Salinity

Flow

Light & heat fluxes

Chlorophyll

Turbidity

Particulate carbon

Local variables (sensor networks)

Page 24: Introducing an Integrated Marine Observing System for Australia (IMOS)

AA

R

G

Planned IMOS Coastal Deployments