Wednesday, April 6, 2016

NASA examines El Niño's impact on ocean’s food source

Strong El Nino events have a big impact on phytoplankton (in green), especially when the warm water pushes far to the east of the Pacific Ocean, as in 1997.

Credits: NASA/Goddard

From NASA

El Niño years can have a big impact on the littlest plants in the ocean, and NASA scientists are studying the relationship between the two.

In El Niño years, huge masses of warm water – equivalent to about half of the volume of the Mediterranean Sea – slosh east across the Pacific Ocean towards South America.
While this warm water changes storm systems in the atmosphere, it also has an impact below the ocean’s surface.
These impacts, which researchers can visualize with satellite data, can ripple up the food chain to fisheries and the livelihoods of fishermen.

El Niño’s mass of warm water puts a lid on the normal currents of cold, deep water that typically rise to the surface along the equator and off the coast of Chile and Peru, said Stephanie Uz, ocean scientist at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
In a process called upwelling, those cold waters normally bring up the nutrients that feed the tiny organisms, which form the base of the food chain.
"An El Niño basically stops the normal upwelling," Uz said.
"There’s a lot of starvation that happens to the marine food web."
These tiny plants, called phytoplankton, are fish food – without them, fish populations drop, and the fishing industries that many coastal regions depend on can collapse.


El Niño years can have a big impact on the littlest plants in the ocean, and NASA scientists are studying the relationship between the two. Ocean color maps, based on a month's worth of satellite data, show El Niño's impact on phytoplankton. 

With NASA satellite data, and ocean color software called SeaDAS, developed at the Ocean Biology Processing Group at Goddard, Uz has been mapping where these important phytoplankton appear. Orbiting instruments like the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer on the Aqua satellite, and the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite on the Suomi NPP satellite collect data on the color of the ocean.
From shades of blue and green, scientists can calculate the amount of green chlorophyll – and therefore the amount of phytoplankton present.
The ocean color maps, based on a month’s worth of satellite data, can show that El Niño impact on phytoplankton.
In December 2015, at the peak of the current El Niño event, there was more blue – and less green chlorophyll – in the Pacific Ocean off of Peru and Chile, compared to the previous year.
Uz and her colleagues are also watching as the El Niño weakens this spring, to see when and where the phytoplankton reappear as the upwelling cold water brings nutrients back to the region.
"They can pop back up pretty quickly, once they have a source of nutrients," Uz said.
Researchers can also examine the differences in ocean color between two different El Niño events.
During the large 1997-1998 El Niño event, the green chlorophyll virtually disappeared from the coast of Chile.
This year’s event, while it caused a drop in chlorophyll primarily along the equator, was much less severe for the coastal phytoplankton population.
The reason – the warmer-than-normal waters associated with the two El Niño events were centered in different geographical locations.
In 1997-1998, the biggest ocean temperature abnormalities were in the eastern Pacific Ocean; this year the focus was in the central ocean.
This difference impacts where the phytoplankton can feed on nutrients, and where the fish can feed on phytoplankton.
"When you have an East Pacific El Niño, like 1997-1998, it has a much bigger impact on the fisheries off of South America," Uz said.
But Central Pacific El Niño events, like this year’s, still have an impact on ocean ecosystems, just with a shift in location.
Researchers are noting reduced food available along the food chain around the Galapagos Islands, for example.
And there has been a drop in phytoplankton off the coast of South America, just not as dramatically as before.

Differences in December phytoplankton abundances are visualized for three years: during the strong East Pacific El Nino of 1997 (using SeaWiFS satellite data), during a normal year in 2013 (using data from MODIS on the Aqua satellite), and during the strong Central Pacific El Nino of 2015 (MODIS/Aqua).

Credits: Uz/NASA Goddard
Scientists have more tools on hand to study this El Niño, and can study more elements of the event, Uz said.
They’re putting these tools to use to ask questions not just about ocean ecology, but about the carbon cycle as well.
"We know how important phytoplankton are for the marine food web, and we’re trying to understand their role as a carbon pump," Uz said.
The carbon pump refers to one of the ways the Earth system removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
When phytoplankton die, their carbon-based bodies sink to the ocean floor, where they can remain for millions of years.
El Niño is a naturally occurring disruption to the typical ocean currents, she said – so it’s important to understand the phenomenon to better attribute what occurs naturally, and what occurs due to human-caused disruptions to the system.
Other scientists at Goddard are investigating ways to forecast the ebbs and flows of nutrients using the center’s supercomputers, incorporating data like winds, sea surface temperatures, air pressures and more.
"It’s like weather forecasts, but for bionutrients and phytoplankton in the ocean," said Cecile Rousseaux, an ocean modeler with Goddard’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office.
The forecasts could help fisheries managers estimate how good the catch could be in a particular year, she said, since fish populations depend on phytoplankton populations.
The 1997-1998 El Niño led to a major collapse in the anchovy fishery off of Chile, which caused economic hardships for fishermen along the coast.
So far, Rousseaux said, the phytoplankton forecast models haven’t shown any collapses for the 2015-2016 El Niño, possibly because the warm water isn’t reaching as far east in the Pacific this time around.
The forecast of phytoplankton populations effort is a relatively new effort, she said, so it’s too soon to make definite forecasts.
But the data so far, from the modeling group and others, show conditions returning to a more normal state this spring.
The next step for the model, she said, is to try to determine which individual species of phytoplankton will bloom where, based on nutrient amounts, temperatures and other factors – using satellites and other tools to determine which kind of microscopic plant is where.
"We rely on satellite data, but this will go one step further and give us even more information," Rousseaux said.

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Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Germany BSH update in the GeoGarage platform

52 nautical raster charts updated

US NOAA update in the GeoGarage platform

6 nautical raster charts updated :

What’s straight across the ocean when you’re at the beach


From Washington Post by Ana Swanson

If you jumped in the ocean at Atlantic City, N.J., and started swimming in a straight line, where in the world do you think you would end up?
The answer, surprisingly, is South America, according to a new map project by cartographer Andy Woodruff. If you start swimming now, you just might end up in Rio in time for the summer Olympics.


Woodruff has created a beautiful series of maps that shows what is across the ocean from you when you're standing on beaches around the world.
His maps are actually inspired by an article and series of maps by me, Laris Karklis and Weiyi Cai, which in turn were based on earlier maps made by Eric Odenheimer.


These earlier maps, like the one above, showed what is due east or west of you when you are standing on any given beach around the world.
As those maps indicate, what's directly east of Atlantic City is actually Portugal.
But as Woodruff points out, when you're standing on a beach, you're rarely facing directly east or west.
Most of the time you're facing perpendicular to the shore and staring out at the water.
Since coastlines around the world twist and turn in extreme directions, you could be facing any direction, not just east or west.
So Woodruff created the beautiful series of maps below, which highlight the beaches around the world that face a particular continent.
He used medium scale Natural Earth data to calculate the angle of the coast at regular intervals, then drew a line directly out to sea to see where it would end up.
In this image, lines are drawn from the beaches where you would hit Australia or Oceania if you went straight ahead and didn't turn.

 Here is what Woodruff's maps look like for other continents:


If you're wondering why the lines on these maps look like they do, the short answer is that the earth is round.
Woodruff's lines follow a great circle arc, which look curved on flat maps but are the shortest and straightest lines between two points on a sphere.
This is why, if you've ever traveled long distances on an airplane, you might have noticed that it looks like the plane is making an arc on the map -- it's a two-dimensional representation of the shortest path in a three-dimensional space.
You can read more about this and Woodruff's maps here.

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Monday, April 4, 2016

A guide to identifying counterfeit Admiralty products


From Maritime Executive

The United Kingdom Hydrographic Office (UKHO) has reported a rising number of counterfeit copies of charts and publications, and has issued a reminder that the use of unauthorized, unvalidated information may be unlawful and dangerous.
The counterfeit Admiralty products haven't been reviewed by UKHO's staff, who ensure the quality of charts and publications widely used for navigation around the world, and the content doesn't necessarily come from any relevant government source or hydrographic office.
Its use for navigation could be hazardous, UKHO says.
In addition, fake charts do not satisfy SOLAS carriage requirements, and may violate the laws of flag and port state authorities, plus international copyright laws.
In nations which are signatory to the Berne Convention on intellectual property rights, authorities have the ability to seize counterfeit documents.
UKHO has issued a guide to identifying counterfeit products, including photos of the originals displayed adjacent to photos of the fakes.
The office suggests that mariners with suspicions about the authenticity of their sailing directions or charts to contact UKHO directly.

Damian Bowler, chief commercial officer of the UKHO, said that “while some of the counterfeits are very easy to spot, others are more difficult to detect.
The UKHO continues to urge all purchasers, users, inspectors and regulators to look out for counterfeit ADMIRALTY charts and publications.
Counterfeit versions . . . cannot be trusted for voyage planning or navigational purposes.
They are unsafe, unofficial, non-compliant with SOLAS and illegal to carry or sell.
Buyers also carry the considerable risk of failing port state inspections.”
“We are continuing to seek and stop the production and sale of counterfeit copies of ADMIRALTY products and have raised our concerns with the International Maritime Organization, the International Hydrographic Organisation and Flag States. We also encourage anyone that suspects they may be in possession of counterfeit products to get in touch with us,” he said.

We are asking users of ADMIRALTY Maritime Products & Services to be aware of counterfeit products that are currently in circulation.
These products have not been issued officially by or on the authority of a Government, authorized Hydrographic Office or other relevant Government institution and do not satisfy the carriage requirements of the International Convention on the Safety of Life at Sea (see Chapter V, Regulations 2.2 and 19.2.1.4 of the Convention).

Furthermore, these counterfeit ADMIRALTY products have not undergone the rigorous checking procedures which take place for official versions; posing a significant safety risk to vessels, crews and cargo.

This simple guide has been provided to help you identify genuine ADMIRALTY products and reduce the risk of counterfeits being used for navigation.
If you do find a counterfeit product, please inform the UKHO by contacting our customer services team.
Details of where and when the product was purchased, photographs and ideally the product itself should be provided to help us identify the source.

Publications

Publications published since October 2014 include a certificate of authenticity.
This can be found inside the rear cover of the publication or within the opening pages.
The certificate should be stamped and dated by the issuing Chart Agent to certify it is a genuine ADMIRALTY product.
Publications published since October 2014 include a grey graphic showing the UKHO crest across random pages.
If photocopied, the words ‘ILLEGAL COPY’ will be visible.
Counterfeiters have been known to try
and overcome this by removing the graphic completely, resulting in pages not being numbered.
They may also remove the entire graphic except that part that covers the page number.
In this instance some of the graphic can still be seen, resulting in the page number having a grey background rather than plain white.

Charts

ADMIRALTY Charts contain branded watermarks

Genuine charts bear the ADMIRALTY “Flying A” watermark or the new ‘ADMIRALTY’ watermark within the paper. This watermark can be seen by holding the chart up to the light. Once you have identified the watermark on official ADMIRALTY charts, this stock can be compared to any suspicious charts.

Every paper chart contains a thumb label

Every ADMIRALTY chart carries a ‘thumb label’ strip on the reverse of the chart that contains the ADMIRALTY logo, the chart number, the geographic area featured, a barcode and date.
Your ADMIRALTY Chart Agent should have also stamped the chart.

Inconsistent use of colours and paper weights

The ‘look and feel’ of a suspicious chart can be compared to a genuine ADMIRALTY chart.
If the ink on a chart looks to be a different colour tone, weight or feel then it is probably a counterfeit copy (see example above).

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