Evaluation of Vertical Patterns in Chlorophyll-A Derived From a Data Assimilating Model of Satellite-Based Ocean Color

Date

2024-07-09

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Arteaga, Lionel A., and Cecile S. Rousseaux. “Evaluation of Vertical Patterns in Chlorophyll-A Derived From a Data Assimilating Model of Satellite-Based Ocean Color.” Earth and Space Science 11, no. 7 (2024): e2023EA003378. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023EA003378.

Rights

This work was written as part of one of the author's official duties as an Employee of the United States Government and is therefore a work of the United States Government. In accordance with 17 U.S.C. 105, no copyright protection is available for such works under U.S. Law.
Public Domain

Abstract

Satellite-based sensors of ocean color have become the primary tool to infer changes in surface chlorophyll, while BGC-Argo floats are now filling the information gap at depth. Here we use BGC-Argo data to assess depth-resolved information on chlorophyll-a derived from an ocean biogeochemical model constrained by the assimilation of surface ocean color remote sensing. The data-assimilating model replicates well the general seasonality and meridional gradients in surface and depth-resolved chlorophyll-a inferred from the float array in the Southern Ocean. On average, the model tends to overestimate float-based chlorophyll, particularly at times and locations of high productivity such as the beginning of the spring bloom, subtropical deep chlorophyll maxima, and non-iron limited regions of the Southern Ocean. The highest model RMSE in the upper 50 m with respect to the float array is of 0.6 mg Chl m⁻³, which should allow the detection of seasonal changes in float-based biomass (varying between 0.01 and >1 mg Chl m⁻³) but might hinder the identification of subtle changes in chlorophyll at narrow local scales. Both model and float profiling data show good agreement with in situ data from station ALOHA, with model estimates showing a slight accuracy edge in inferring depth-resolved observations. Uncertainties in float bio-optical estimates impede their use as a reliable benchmark for validation, but the general qualitative agreement between model and float data provides confidence in the ability of model to replicate biogeochemical features below the surface, where data is not directly constrained by the assimilation of satellite ocean color.