Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Physical Oceanography, Marine Optics & Remote Sensing, Texel, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2013 Jun 12;8(6):e63766. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0063766. Print 2013.
Marine primary productivity is an important agent in the global cycling of carbon dioxide, a major 'greenhouse gas', and variations in the concentration of the ocean's phytoplankton biomass can therefore explain trends in the global carbon budget. Since the launch of satellite-mounted sensors globe-wide monitoring of chlorophyll, a phytoplankton biomass proxy, became feasible. Just as satellites, the Forel-Ule (FU) scale record (a hardly explored database of ocean colour) has covered all seas and oceans--but already since 1889. We provide evidence that changes of ocean surface chlorophyll can be reconstructed with confidence from this record. The EcoLight radiative transfer numerical model indicates that the FU index is closely related to chlorophyll concentrations in open ocean regions. The most complete FU record is that of the North Atlantic in terms of coverage over space and in time; this dataset has been used to test the validity of colour changes that can be translated to chlorophyll. The FU and FU-derived chlorophyll data were analysed for monotonously increasing or decreasing trends with the non-parametric Mann-Kendall test, a method to establish the presence of a consistent trend. Our analysis has not revealed a globe-wide trend of increase or decrease in chlorophyll concentration during the past century; ocean regions have apparently responded differentially to changes in meteorological, hydrological and biological conditions at the surface, including potential long-term trends related to global warming. Since 1889, chlorophyll concentrations have decreased in the Indian Ocean and in the Pacific; increased in the Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean, the Chinese Sea, and in the seas west and north-west of Japan. This suggests that explanations of chlorophyll changes over long periods should focus on hydrographical and biological characteristics typical of single ocean regions, not on those of 'the' ocean.
海洋初级生产力是二氧化碳全球循环的重要因素,二氧化碳是一种主要的“温室气体”,因此海洋浮游植物生物量浓度的变化可以解释全球碳预算的趋势。自从卫星搭载的传感器能够在全球范围内监测叶绿素(浮游植物生物量的一种替代指标)以来,这种监测变得可行了。就像卫星一样,Forel-Ule(FU)尺度记录(一个几乎未被探索的海洋颜色数据库)已经覆盖了所有的海洋——但这已经是从 1889 年开始的了。我们提供的证据表明,可以从这个记录中可靠地重建海洋表面叶绿素的变化。EcoLight 辐射传输数值模型表明,FU 指数与开阔海域的叶绿素浓度密切相关。在空间和时间上,北大西洋的 FU 记录是最完整的;这个数据集被用于测试可以转化为叶绿素的颜色变化的有效性。使用非参数 Mann-Kendall 检验对 FU 和 FU 衍生的叶绿素数据进行单调增加或减少趋势的分析,这是一种确定一致趋势存在的方法。我们的分析没有发现过去一个世纪全球范围内叶绿素浓度增加或减少的趋势;海洋区域显然对表面气象、水文和生物条件的变化做出了不同的反应,包括与全球变暖相关的潜在长期趋势。自 1889 年以来,印度洋和太平洋的叶绿素浓度下降;大西洋、地中海、中国海以及日本以西和西北的海域的叶绿素浓度增加。这表明,对长期叶绿素变化的解释应该集中在单个海洋区域的水文和生物特征上,而不是集中在“海洋”的特征上。