Present and Future Activities on the North West Shelf

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Present and Future Activities on the North West Shelf Susan Wijffels | Dynamic Ocean Theme Leader For the WfO team WEALTH FROM OCEANS NATIONAL RESEARCH FLAGSHIP

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Present and Future Activities on the North West Shelf. Wealth from oceans national research flagship. Susan Wijffels | Dynamic Ocean Theme Leader. For the WfO team. Summary. CSIRO is working in the Northwest across a broad range of areas - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Present and Future Activities on the North West Shelf

Page 1: Present and Future Activities on the North West Shelf

Present and Future Activities on the North West ShelfSusan Wijffels | Dynamic Ocean Theme LeaderFor the WfO team

WEALTH FROM OCEANS NATIONAL RESEARCH FLAGSHIP

Page 2: Present and Future Activities on the North West Shelf

CSIRO is working in the Northwest across a broad range of areas Oceans and climate from decadal through daily processes Biogeochemical and carbon cycling Ecosystem characterisation, function, dynamics and biodiversity

including human impacts

Future•Would like to see more synthesis across disciplines •Data scarcity remains a huge challenge•Target development of modelling/prediction systems initially based on those deployed in other regions (BlueLink/eReefs) but tailored for this unique region

Improved ocean information systems and services for government, public and industry

Summary

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Monsoons

Intraseasonal Variability

Indian Ocean Dipole

El Niño – Southern Oscillation

Decadal Variability

Biogeochemical Cycling

Indonesian Throughflow

Large-Scale Modes of Atmosphere-Ocean VariabilityLarge-Scale Modes of Atmosphere-Ocean Variability

Southern Annular Mode

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Mean Flow Field

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On interannual time scales – remote winds control the ocean structure in this region

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To manage these regions

we need to know the large-scale influences (plus regional information, e.g. continentalshelf processes):

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International INSTANT ProjectAustralia,USA,France,Indonesia,Netherlands

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Indonesian ThroughflowFlow variability with depth

Surface layers and deep layers are decoupled and forced differently

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Ocean response to Tropical Cyclones

• CSIRO’s fully non-linear, 3-D hydrodynamic model, SHOC, is used to study the ocean response to Tropical Cyclones on the NWS

• Surface currents and temperature response to Tropical Cyclone Bobby is shown

Madeleine Cahill and Peter Craig,CSIROFor Woodside

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IMOS Indonesian Though Flow shelf array: IMOS/AIMS/CSIRO

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FRDC – management implication of climate change on fisheries in Western Australia WA Department of Fisheries, CSIRO Wealth from Oceans Flagship

ObjectivesAssess future climate change effects on Western Australia marine environments using a suite of IPCC model projections, downscaled to the key shelf regions and the spatial and temporal scales relevant for key fisheries

Examine the modeled shelf climate change scenarios on fisheries and implications of historic and future climate change effects

Projected changes in winter chlorophyll concentration

Downscaling model Climate model

A weakened Leeuwin Current and lower eddy energetics in the 2060’s cause WA waters to be less productive

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Caring for Our CountryIdentifying threats to marine biodiversity of the Ningaloo World Heritage Area

A collaboration between:

CSIRO– Status of World Heritage Values: reef fish, sharks, turtles– Movement and habitat use of iconic megafauna

DEC Status of World Heritage Values: reef fish

DoF Distribution and intensity of fishing effort

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Pilbara Marine Conservation Partnership

Goals

Regional scale assessment of condition and threats to biodiversity; coral reef health, benthos, fish and sharks, 2012-2017.

Better understand variations in coral reef health and resilience in context of key environmental drivers; habitat/biodiversity, oceanographic connectivity, climate change, fishing pressure, nutrient supply, cyclones

Enhance net conservation benefits to globally significant coral reef systems, detect medium and long term trends.

Project commenced late 2012, first tasks to map biodiversity and connectivity now being conducted by CSIRO

Systematic biodiversity sampling Connectivity modelling

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CSIRO CARBON CLUSTER ACTIVITIESObjectives

•carbon inventory information on sources, speciation, stocks and flows

•process understanding of changes in carbon cycling resulting from natural and anthropogenic change

Activities1.Carbon sequestration, stoichiometry and stores potential of representative Australian coastal ecosystems

2.Benthic community metabolism and benthic-pelagic coupling

3.Pelagic community metabolism in Australian coastal waters

4.Scaling up to regional inventories and data assimilation and Parameter and Model Uncertainties

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Activities in NW• Oceans Institute through Carlos

will have a focus in NW on carbon sequestration in seagrass, mangroves and sediment

• Some work on pelagic C subject to Southern Surveyor cruise being approved (P. Thompson)

• CC would like access to carbon relevant data collected under WAMSI and other projects

• CSIRO activities will be principally around the development of better models, assimilation and scaling methods, and economic assessment

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NW shelf Management Strategies revisited• Previous large scale effects of fish

trawling project (Sainsbury 1987,88)

• CSIRO-WA Fisheries proposal• “Recovery after trawling: Resurveying

the North West Shelf after 25 years of sustainable trawling”

• Different spatial fishing zoning systems

• Natural experiment to determine impacts and recovery

Source: WA Fisheries

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CSIRO is working in the Northwest across a broad range of areas

Oceans and climate from decadal through daily processes Biogeochemical and carbon cycling Ecosystem characterisation, function, dynamics and biodiversity

Future•Would like to see more synthesis across disciplines •Data scarcity remains a huge challenge•Target tailored modelling/prediction systems initially based on those deployed in other regions (BlueLink/eReefs)

Improved ocean information systems and services for government, public and industry

Summary

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The key R&D partners -BoM, CSIRO AIMS

Goal is to build

1. A framework to explore and predict the impact of multiple factors such as climate change (ocean temperature and pH) and water quality (nutrients, chlorophyll, turbidity)

2. An interactive, visual picture of the reef and its component parts, accessible to all.

eReefs

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What would it take to start building a similar framework/tool for the NWS?

Wijffels, Susan (CMAR, Hobart)
How far along this road does WAMSI Kimberly take us???
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Thank you

Wealth from OceansSusan Wijffels Theme Leader The Dynamic [email protected]

WEALTH FROM OCEANS NATIONAL RESEARCH FLAGSHIP

Contributors: Andy Steven, Russ Babcock, Matt VanderKlift, Peter Thompson, Ming Feng, Andreas Schiller,

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Integrated Project 2: the basics

Hydrodynamic and biogeochemical modeling using fully coupled models

Quantification of benthic and pelagic productivity

Sources of nutrients and the importance of benthic/pelagic coupling

Ecological connectivity

Catchment-ocean interactions – Regions of freshwater Influence

Climate impacts

Trophodynamic interactions

Transport and fate of nutrients and other potential contaminants from dredging and oil spills

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