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GEOMAR Library Ocean Research Information Access

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  • OceanRep  (2)
  • 2020-2024  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Description: The report analyses the interactions between the public and private organisations involved in the project activities as members of the project consortium, internal advisory boards and stakeholders. This strong, collaborative and interdisciplinary collaboration between public and private sectors is essential to improve ocean observing and forecasting systems with innovative technological solutions also in support of the implementation process of important global strategies related to the ocean.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/book
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: The ocean and inland waters are two separate regimes, with concentrations in greenhouse gases differing on orders of magnitude between them. Together, they create the land–ocean aquatic continuum (LOAC), which comprises itself largely of areas with little to no data with regards to understanding the global carbon system. Reasons for this include remote and inaccessible sample locations, often tedious methods that require collection of water samples and subsequent analysis in the lab, and the complex interplay of biological, physical and chemical processes. This has led to large inconsistencies, increasing errors and has inevitably lead to potentially false upscaling. A set-up of multiple pre-existing oceanographic sensors allowing for highly detailed and accurate measurements was successfully deployed in oceanic to remote inland regions over extreme concentration ranges. The set-up consists of four sensors simultaneously measuring pCO2, pCH4 (both flow-through, membrane-based non-dispersive infrared (NDIR) or tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy (TDLAS) sensors), O2 and a thermosalinograph at high resolution from the same water source. The flexibility of the system allowed for deployment from freshwater to open ocean conditions on varying vessel sizes, where we managed to capture day–night cycles, repeat transects and also delineate small-scale variability. Our work demonstrates the need for increased spatiotemporal monitoring and shows a way of homogenizing methods and data streams in the ocean and limnic realms.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
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