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Mapping Dissolved Organic Carbon in Eastern U.S. Coastal Waters Using Ocean Color Satellite Data River runoff of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) into the oceans is significant and can play a very important role in the global carbon cycle since the carbon reservoir of DOC in the ocean is comparable to carbon dioxide [CO2] in the atmosphere. A fraction of DOC Chromophoric Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM) is capable of absorbing visible and ultraviolet light and can be detected by ocean color satellite sensors. Various investigators have reported a relationship between DOC concentrations and absorption by CDOM, but the parameterization of this relationship appears to vary regionally and seasonally due to photochemistry. This project investigates the relationships between DOC and CDOM and between carbon and ocean color. Data from historical and ongoing fieldwork will be used to study the spatial and seasonal distribution of DOC, along with inherent and apparent optical properties, for the coastal and continental shelf regions along the east coast of the U.S. The scientists will also investigate photodegradation of DOC to dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) during summer and link it to bleaching of CDOM. The combined dataset will be used to develop an algorithm to map DOC from the DOC-to-CDOM dependence using satellite ocean color sensors. Yearly time-series of DOC maps for the east coast of the U.S. will then be constructed, allowing scientists to explore the spatial and temporal variability, as well as long-term changes in this parameter with a strong emphasis on the processes driving DOC distribution, transformation and transport. This proposal addresses an area of primary interest for NASA in the North American Carbon program by bringing remote sensing to bear on characterization of carbon stocks, transport and transformations of terrestrially derived organic carbon in the coastal waters off the eastern United States.
Contacts:
Principal Investigator Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University ajit@ledo.columbia.edu Rossana Del Vecchio Co-Investigator University of Maryland Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center rossdv@wam.umd.edu James Nelson Co-Investigator Skidaway Institute of Oceanography nelson@skio.peachnet.edu Science Goals: This research will map DOC (and terrigenous CDOM) to compile a long-term dataset and better define the processes driving the distribution, transformation and transport of dissolved organic carbon in the coastal ocean off the eastern U.S.
Partners: This research is funded through NASA's North American Carbon Cycle Science program and is a joint effort among the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, University of Maryland and Skidaway Institute of Oceanography. When: Sporadic missions will be conducted over a three-year period (2005-2007) Where: Field surveys will be conducted at several locations off the eastern U.S. coastline, especially over the South Atlantic Bight near Savannah, Georgia. Links:
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