U.S. JGOFS
Synthesis & Modeling Project
   
Raleigh Hood
Julian McCreary
Kevin Kohler
Sharon Smith
Don Olson
Development, validation and improvement of a coupled biological/chemical/ physical model for the Arabian Sea

NSF: OCE-9818708
36 months

PROJECT DESCRIPTION: This proposal outlines three research tasks designed to develop, validate, and improve a biological/chemical/physical model for the Arabian Sea.  A focus of the proposed research is to understand the Arabian-Sea carbon cycle, which requires that biological and physical processes are properly represented.  To understand a problem of this complexity requires the development of a hierarchy of models that vary in dynamical complexity.  Our approach is to begin with a dynamically simple system, to compare its solutions carefully with available data, identify model deficiencies and to develop and test various hypotheses for overcoming them.  Our initial system will consist of three components: a 5 ½-layer physical model, a 4-compartment NAHD biological model, and a chemical model that simulates carbon and oxygen cycling.  The system has the advantage that it is computationally very efficient.  Consequently, we will be able to carry out extensive test runs, and hence can carefully assess the influence of individual processes.  Versions of each component model have already proven successful at simulating observations in the Arabian Sea and elsewhere, and this prior success gives us confidence that the coupled system will also produce useful solutions.  The initial system will be gradually improved and expanded as we identify deficiencies and modify the model to correct them.  The central goal of the U.S. JGOFS Synthesis and Modeling Project (SMP) is to synthesize observational data into a set of models that can be used for prediction.  Here, we propose to bring together a group of scientists with the collective expertise necessary to achieve this goal for the Arabian Sea.   Specifically, Sharon Smith contributes her knowledge of Arabian Sea biological and chemical fields, Raleigh Hood and Don Olson contribute their expertise in biological and chemical modeling, and Julian McCreary contributes his modeling experience of physical processes in the region.  Each Principal Investigator thus performs an important function in the overall research effort.

In this effort we will test fundamental hypotheses concerning the factors that control biogeochemical fluxes in the Arabian Sea. This region was selected to be the location of one of the four U.S. JGOFS Process Studies because of its strong monsoonal forcing and large seasonal oscillations, and indeed the project acquired the most complete seasonal and spatial resolution of carbon cycling among the four Studies. These field observations, in combination with concurrent ONR measurements, historical data and new satellite ocean color observations, thus provide an ideal data set for developing a coupled model that can respond realistically under a wide range of oceanic conditions. Consequently, we expect that our results will be readily generalizable to other regions of the world ocean.

RESULTS: Arabian Sea ecosystem model results

PUBLICATIONS: R.R. Hood, K.E. Kohler, J.P. McCreary and S.L. Smith. 2003. A four-dimensional validation of a coupled physical biological model of the Arabian Sea. Deep-Sea Research II 50(22-26) 2917-2945, doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2003.07.004, U.S. JGOFS Contribution No. 939.

McCreary, J.P., Jr., K.E. Kohler, R.R. Hood, and D.B. Olson. 1996. A four-component ecosystem model of biological activity in the Arabian Sea. Progress in Oceanography 37 193-240.

McCreary, J.P., Jr., K.E. Kohler, R.R. Hood, S. Smith, J. Kindle, A.S. Fischer and R.A. Weller (2001). Influences of diurnal and intraseasonal forcing on mixed-layer and biological variability in the Central Arabian Sea. Journal of Geophysical Research, 106: 7139-7155, U.S. JGOFS Contribution No. 586.

RELATED PROJECTS: Friedrichs, et al., Regional ecosystem model testbeds
INVESTIGATOR 
INFORMATION:
Raleigh R. Hood
Horn Point Environmental Laboratory
2020 Horns Point Rd
P.O. Box 775
Cambridge, MD 21613
tel: (410) 221-8434, 8497
fax: (410) 221-8490
raleigh@hpl.umces.edu
http://www.hpl.umces.edu/faculty/hood.html

Julian McCreary
School of Ocean & Earth Science and Technology
International Pacific Research Center
University of Hawaii
2525 Correa Rd.
Honolulu, Hawaii 96822
tel: (808) 956-2216
fax: (808) 956-9425
jay@soest.hawaii.edu
http://iprc.soest.hawaii.edu/people/mccreary.html

Kevin E. Kohler
Oceanographic Center
Nova Southeastern University
8000 North Ocean Drive
Dania Beach, FL  33004-3078
tel: (954) 262-3641
fax: (954) 262-4158
kevin@nova.edu

Sharon Smith
RSMAS - MBF
University of Miami
4600 Rickenbacker Causeway
Miami, FL 33149-1098
tel: (305) 361-4702
fax: (305) 361-4765
ssmith@rsmas.miami.edu
http://www.rsmas.miami.edu/divs/mbf/people/ssmith.html

Don Olson
RSMAS/MPO
University of Miami
4600 Rickenbacker Causeway
Miami, FL 33149
tel: (305) 361-4074
fax: (305) 361-4696
dolson@rsmas.miami.edu
http://www.rsmas.miami.edu/divs/mpo/people/dolson.html