NobleBlocks

NOAA Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing Program

governmentSilver Spring, United States

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from NOAA Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing Program. Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
1
Citations
32
h-index
2
i10-index
2
Also known as
Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing ProgramNOAA Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing ProgramNOAA's Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing ProgramNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing ProgramU.S. Global Ocean Monitoring and ObservingUnited States Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing

Top-cited papers from NOAA Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing Program

Effects of the Pandemic on Observing the Global Ocean
Tim Boyer, Huai‐Min Zhang, Kevin O’Brien, James Reagan +4 more
2022· Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society16doi:10.1175/bams-d-21-0210.1

Abstract The years since 2000 have been a golden age in in situ ocean observing with the proliferation and organization of autonomous platforms such as surface drogued buoys and subsurface Argo profiling floats augmenting ship-based observations. Global time series of mean sea surface temperature and ocean heat content are routinely calculated based on data from these platforms, enhancing our understanding of the ocean’s role in Earth’s climate system. Individual measurements of meteorological, sea surface, and subsurface variables directly improve our understanding of the Earth system, weather forecasting, and climate projections. They also provide the data necessary for validating and calibrating satellite observations. Maintaining this ocean observing system has been a technological, logistical, and funding challenge. The global COVID-19 pandemic, which took hold in 2020, added strain to the maintenance of the observing system. A survey of the contributing components of the observing system illustrates the impacts of the pandemic from January 2020 through December 2021. The pandemic did not reduce the short-term geographic coverage (days to months) capabilities mainly due to the continuation of autonomous platform observations. In contrast, the pandemic caused critical loss to longer-term (years to decades) observations, greatly impairing the monitoring of such crucial variables as ocean carbon and the state of the deep ocean. So, while the observing system has held under the stress of the pandemic, work must be done to restore the interrupted replenishment of the autonomous components and plan for more resilient methods to support components of the system that rely on cruise-based measurements.