4.5 Article

Coastal sea level monitoring in the Mediterranean and Black seas

Journal

OCEAN SCIENCE
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 997-1053

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/os-18-997-2022

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Horizon 2020 (EuroSea) [862626]
  2. Horizon 2020 (JERICO-S3) [871153]

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This paper maps the coastal sea level monitoring infrastructures and data availability in the Mediterranean and Black seas. The survey includes a description of major monitoring networks, data characteristics, and the existence of ancillary measurements. It also highlights the need for harmonization of data in different repositories. An assessment of the networks' capabilities for different sea level applications is provided as well as recommendations for further development.
Employed for over a century, the traditional way of monitoring sea level variability by tide gauges - in combination with modern observational techniques like satellite altimetry - is an inevitable ingredient in sea level studies over the climate scales and in coastal seas. The development of the instrumentation, remote data acquisition, processing, and archiving in the last decades has allowed the extension of the applications to a variety of users and coastal hazard managers. The Mediterranean and Black seas are examples of such a transition - while having a long tradition of sea level observations with several records spanning over a century, the number of modern tide gauge stations is growing rapidly, with data available both in real time and as a research product at different time resolutions. As no comprehensive survey of the tide gauge networks has been carried out recently in these basins, the aim of this paper is to map the existing coastal sea level monitoring infrastructures and the respective data availability. The survey encompasses a description of major monitoring networks in the Mediterranean and Black seas and their characteristics, including the type of sea level sensors, measuring resolutions, data availability, and existence of ancillary measurements, altogether collecting information about 240 presently operational tide gauge stations. The availability of the Mediterranean and Black seas sea level data in the global and European sea level repositories has been also screened and classified following their sampling interval and level of quality check, pointing to the necessity of harmonization of the data available with different metadata and series in different repositories. Finally, an assessment of the networks' capabilities for their use in different sea level applications has been done, with recommendations that might mitigate the bottlenecks and ensure further development of the networks in a coordinated way, a critical need in the era of human-induced climate changes and sea level rise.

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