University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA.
Environ Monit Assess. 1986 Jul;7(1):79-90. doi: 10.1007/BF00398030.
Oceanic research and modelling for the World Climate Research Program will utilize several recently-developed instruments and measuring techniques as well as well-tested, long-used instruments. Ocean-scanning satellites will map the component of the ocean-surface topography related to ocean currents and mesoscale eddies and to fluctuating water volumes caused by ocean warming and cooling. Other satellite instruments will measure the direction and magnitude of wind stress on the sea surface, surface water temperatures, the distribution of chlorophyll and other photosynthetic pigments, the characteristics of internal waves, and possible precipitation over the ocean. Networks of acoustic transponders will obtain a three-dimensional picture of the distribution of temperature from the surface down to mid-depth and of long-term changes in temperature at depth. Ocean research vessels will determine the distribution and fate of geochemical tracers and will also make high-precision, deep hydrographic casts. Ships of opportunity, using expendable instruments, will measure temperature, salinity and currents in the upper water layers. Drifting and anchored buoys will also measure these properties as well as those of the air above the sea surface. Tide gauges installed on islands and exposed coastal locations will measure variations in monthly and shorter-period mean sea level. These tide gauges will provide 'ground truth' for the satellite maps of sea-surface topography, and will also determine variations in ocean currents and temperature.All these instruments will be used in several major programs, the most ambitious of which is the World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) designed to obtain global measurements of major currents throughout the world ocean, greater understanding of the transformation of water masses, and the role of advective, convective, and turbulent processes in exchange of properties between surface and deep-ocean layers.A five- to ten-year experiment-"Tropical Oceans and Global Atmosphere (TOGA)"-will be undertaken to sudy the sequence of events of air-sea interactions in the tropical oceans and their impact on climatic variations on land-for example, variations in the strength and location of the Indian Ocean monsoon, droughts in low latitudes, and climatic fluctuations in temperate latitudes.Experimental and continuing time series will be taken at fixed locations to obtain a better picture of the magnitude and causes of ocean climate variability. National and multinational systematic repeated measurements along selected ocean transects or in specific ocean areas will be taken to determine oceanic variability and teleconnections between oceanic and atmospheric processes. Examples are the long Japanese section along the meridian of 137° E and the 'Sections' program of the USSR and several other countries in Energy-Active zones.The results from this wide range of observations and experiments will be used to guide and define mathematical models of the ocean circulation and its interactions with the atmosphere.It can be shown that biogeochemical processes in the ocean play an important role in determining the carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere and thus in causing long-term climatic changes. Variations in the biological productivity of sub-surface waters cause variations in the effectveness of the biological pump which carries organic carbon down into deeper waters where it is oxidized. Studies of ice cores from 20 000 to 30 000 yr before the present indicate that atmospheric carbon dioxide varied by a factor of 2 within times of the order of 100 yr, and these variations were accompanied by large excursions in atmospheric temperature. Thus, ocean climatic monitoring must take into account measurements of both biological and physical variations in the ocean.
世界气候研究计划的海洋研究和建模将利用一些最近开发的仪器和测量技术以及经过充分验证的长期使用的仪器。海洋扫描卫星将绘制与海流和中尺度涡流以及由海洋升温冷却引起的水体波动有关的海洋表面地形的组成部分。其他卫星仪器将测量海面风应力的方向和大小、地表水温度、叶绿素和其他光合作用色素的分布、内波特征以及海洋上空可能的降水。声纳转发器网络将获得从表面到中层的温度分布和深度处温度长期变化的三维图像。海洋研究船将确定地球化学成分示踪剂的分布和归宿,并进行高精度、深水文测量。利用消耗性仪器的机会船将测量上层水体的温度、盐度和海流。漂流浮标和锚定浮标也将测量这些特性以及海面以上的空气特性。安装在岛屿和暴露海岸位置的验潮仪将测量月平均和较短周期平均海平面的变化。这些验潮仪将为海面地形的卫星图提供“地面真相”,并确定海流和温度的变化。所有这些仪器都将用于几个主要的计划,其中最雄心勃勃的是世界海洋环流实验(WOCE),旨在获得全球范围内对世界海洋主要海流的测量,更好地了解水团的转化,以及平流、对流和湍流传质过程在海洋表面和深层之间的作用。一个为期五到十年的实验——“热带海洋与全球大气(TOGA)”——将进行,以研究热带海洋中空气-海洋相互作用的事件序列及其对陆地气候变化的影响,例如印度洋季风的强度和位置变化、低纬度地区的干旱以及温带地区的气候波动。在固定位置进行实验和连续时间序列测量,以更好地了解海洋气候可变性的幅度和原因。在选定的海洋横断面上或在特定的海洋区域,将进行国家和跨国系统的重复测量,以确定海洋可变性以及海洋和大气过程之间的遥相关。例如,日本沿着 137°E 子午线的长剖面和苏联以及其他几个国家的“剖面”计划在能量活跃区。从这些广泛的观测和实验中得到的结果将用于指导和定义海洋环流及其与大气相互作用的数学模型。可以证明,海洋生物地球化学过程在决定大气中二氧化碳含量以及由此引起的长期气候变化方面起着重要作用。次表层水生物生产力的变化导致携带有机碳进入更深层水体的生物泵的效率发生变化,在那里有机碳被氧化。对距今 20000 到 30000 年前的冰芯的研究表明,大气二氧化碳在 100 年左右的时间内变化了 2 倍,这些变化伴随着大气温度的大幅波动。因此,海洋气候监测必须考虑到海洋生物和物理变化的测量。