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Assessing the uncertainties of model estimates of primary productivity in the tropical Pacific Ocean

Authors :
Mark Dowell
Scott C. Doney
Jay O'Reilly
Robert T. O'Malley
André Morel
James R. Christian
Takahiko Kameda
Erik T. Buitenhuis
Vincent S. Saba
Ichio Asanuma
Jerry Tjiputra
Áurea Maria Ciotti
John P. Dunne
Arne M.E. Winguth
J. Keith Moore
Nicolas Hoepffner
Watson W. Gregg
David Antoine
Michele Scardi
Robert Armstrong
Joji Ishizaka
Kirk Waters
Michael J. Behrenfeld
Richard T. Barber
Frédéric Mélin
Ivan D. Lima
Toby K. Westberry
Mary-Elena Carr
Timothy J Smyth
Bernard Gentili
John Marra
Marjorie A. M. Friedrichs
Fei Chai
M. Schmeltz
Source :
Friedrichs, MAM; Carr, ME; Barber, RT; Scardi, M; Antoine, D; Armstrong, RA; et al.(2009). Assessing the uncertainties of model estimates of primary productivity in the tropical Pacific Ocean. Journal of Marine Systems, 76(1-2), 113-133. doi: 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2008.05.010. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/85q9x15b
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Elsevier Science Limited, 2009.

Abstract

Depth-integrated primary productivity (PP) estimates obtained from satellite ocean color-based models (SatPPMs) and those generated from biogeochemical ocean general circulation models (BOGCMs) represent a key resource for biogeochemical and ecological studies at global as well as regional scales. Calibration and validation of these PP models are not straightforward, however, and comparative studies show large differences between model estimates. The goal of this paper is to compare PP estimates obtained from 30 different models (21 SatPPMs and 9 BOGCMs) to a tropical Pacific PP database consisting of ∼ 100014C measurements spanning more than a decade (1983-1996). Primary findings include: skill varied significantly between models, but performance was not a function of model complexity or type (i.e. SatPPM vs. BOGCM); nearly all models underestimated the observed variance of PP, specifically yielding too few low PP (< 0.2 g C m- 2d- 1) values; more than half of the total root-mean-squared model-data differences associated with the satellite-based PP models might be accounted for by uncertainties in the input variables and/or the PP data; and the tropical Pacific database captures a broad scale shift from low biomass-normalized productivity in the 1980s to higher biomass-normalized productivity in the 1990s, which was not successfully captured by any of the models. This latter result suggests that interdecadal and global changes will be a significant challenge for both SatPPMs and BOGCMs. Finally, average root-mean-squared differences between in situ PP data on the equator at 140°W and PP estimates from the satellite-based productivity models were 58% lower than analogous values computed in a previous PP model comparison 6 years ago. The success of these types of comparison exercises is illustrated by the continual modification and improvement of the participating models and the resulting increase in model skill. © 2008 Elsevier B.V.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Friedrichs, MAM; Carr, ME; Barber, RT; Scardi, M; Antoine, D; Armstrong, RA; et al.(2009). Assessing the uncertainties of model estimates of primary productivity in the tropical Pacific Ocean. Journal of Marine Systems, 76(1-2), 113-133. doi: 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2008.05.010. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/85q9x15b
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8421279f7c8cd90b1d66600a0183d467
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmarsys.2008.05.010.