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A Surface Ocean CO2 Reference Network, SOCONET and Associated Marine Boundary Layer CO2 Measurements

期刊

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
卷 6, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2019.00400

关键词

carbon dioxide; network; oceanography; fluxes; best practices

资金

  1. NOAA office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research
  2. Ocean Observations and Monitoring Division (OOMD) [100007298, 4893]
  3. Norwegian Research Council (ICOS-Norway) [245927]
  4. United States National Science Foundation [OCE-1840868]
  5. European AtlantOS project [633211]
  6. European RINGO project [730944]
  7. United Kingdom NERC SONATA project [NE/P021417/1]
  8. United Kingdom NERC RAGNARoCC project [NE/K002473/1]
  9. NERC SONATA project
  10. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [01LK1224I]
  11. Australia's Integrated Marine Observing System
  12. United States National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Surface Ocean CO2 NETwork (SOCONET) and atmospheric Marine Boundary Layer (MBL) CO2 measurements from ships and buoys focus on the operational aspects of measurements of CO2 in both the ocean surface and atmospheric MBLs. The goal is to provide accurate pCO(2) data to within 2 micro atmosphere (mu atm) for surface ocean and 0.2 parts per million (ppm) for MBL measurements following rigorous best practices, calibration and intercomparison procedures. Platforms and data will be tracked in near real-time and final quality-controlled data will be provided to the community within a year. The network, involving partners worldwide, will aid in production of important products such as maps of monthly resolved surface ocean CO2 and air-sea CO2 flux measurements. These products and other derivatives using surface ocean and MBL CO2 data, such as surface ocean pH maps and MBL CO2 maps, will be of high value for policy assessments and socio-economic decisions regarding the role of the ocean in sequestering anthropogenic CO2 and how this uptake is impacting ocean health by ocean acidification. SOCONET has an open ocean emphasis but will work with regional (coastal) networks. It will liaise with intergovernmental science organizations such as Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW), and the joint committee for and ocean and marine meteorology (JCOMM). Here we describe the details of this emerging network and its proposed operations and practices.

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