Detection of the effects of climate change on ocean ecosystems is often limited by the short duration of available time series. Here, we use ocean transparency measurements (the Secchi disk depth, ZSD) in the California Current Ecosystem since 1949 and combine them with satellite estimates. Historic in situ measurements of ZSD were irregular in space and time and are difficult to interpret in time series due to biases introduced by changing locations and timing. We normalize historic ZSD measurements with satellite-derived mean climatology and create a merged in situ—satellite time series of ZSD for the last 73 yr. Although interannual variability in ZSD is dominated by El Niño Southern Oscillation-related variability ( 50% of the total variance in many areas), a secular trend of decreasing transparency that is correlated with increasing productivity is detected 0–300 km from the coast in an area affected by coastal upwelling north of 27N. In contrast, increasing transparency (correlated with decreasing productivity) is detected offshore (> 1000 km from the coast). In addition to those general trends, transparency is also increasing in coastal area off Baja California south of 27N.
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Baltic Sea transparency from ships and satellites: centennial trends
Water transparency can be measured with optical instruments and estimated with satellite sensors, but such measurements have been widely available for only a few decades. Estimates of water transparency using a white disk called a Secchi disk have been made for over a century and can be used to estimate long-term trends. However, historic in situ measurements of the Secchi depth (Z Sd ) were irregular in space and time and are difficult to interpret in regular time series due to biases introduced by changing locations and the timing of measurements. Satellite data time series, on the other hand, have consistent resolution in both space and time but cover too short a time to resolve climate-scale trends. We normalized historic Z Sd measurements in the Baltic Sea with a satellite-derived mean climatology at 5 d temporal and 4 km spatial resolutions and created a merged time series of Z Sd for the last century. The mean Z Sd in the Baltic Sea from 1927-2020 decreased by 4.2 ± 0.6 m at a rate of 0.045 ± 0.06 m yr -1 . Most of the change happened before 1987, and a further decrease was evident primarily in the satellite data during the 1998-2008 period. After 2008, no significant trend in Z Sd and or the coefficient of diffuse light attenuation was detected in the Baltic Sea. However, in some sub-basins of the Baltic Sea, the decrease in Z Sd continued even after that. The decrease in spectral water transparency in recent decades was highest in the 412 nm band, indicating an increase in the concentration of chromophoric dissolved organic matter.
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- PAR ID:
- 10429252
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Marine Ecology Progress Series
- Volume:
- 697
- ISSN:
- 0171-8630
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 1 to 13
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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