She et al.
Operational Oceanography and Earth System Science
Frontiers In Earth Science | www.frontlersln.org
10
February 2020 | Volume 8 | Article 7
monitoring program, fishery monitoring and some research
projects, which has a much better coverage then the BOOS
network in the open Baltic Sea. Most of the research observations
are not in real or near real time. The research observing program
can be made to fit for the operational application through
open data policy and NRT data delivery, which will fill the
observational data gaps. For example, research data from classical
observations like CTD can be made available in NRT before the
final processing for (climate) research. Vice versa, good quality
operational observations can be used for (climate) research
after appropriate quality control and exposing it to appropriate
processing in delayed mode.
Operational Modeling
The research on the six GCs by the Baltic Earth community is
highly relevant to improve the operational modeling capacity. By
revealing important factors controlling the salinity and sea level
dynamics, results from the GCs 1,4, and 5 can be used to improve
the long-term performance of operational ocean models. The
GC2 research can be used to improve the downscaled models
for resolving coastal-estuary continuum. The GC3 may find new
features and knowledge regarding to the extreme events, which
are always challenge cases in the operational modeling. The GC6
and GC2 research may benefit emerging areas of operational
modeling, e.g., operational ecological modeling, coupled ocean-
hydrological modeling and sediment transport modeling etc.
In order to benefit the operational modeling, there should be
a platform to transform the Baltic Earth research results into the
operational models. This is similar to the “Service Evolution”
element in the CMEMS where dedicated, short-term mini-R&D
projects are funded to transfer the best practice in modeling and
observing research into CMEMS system.
DISCUSSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The Baltic operational oceanography community and the
BALTEX/Baltic Earth community have co-existed in the
past two/three decades. However, only very preliminary
interactions have been carried out because differing objectives
of both communities hampered an intensive collaboration as
outlined below.
Through analysis of the state-of-the-art of operational
oceanography and regional Earth system research, it was found
that the operational observations, modeling platforms, and
products can significantly benefit the Baltic Earth research,
e.g., in the areas of the six grand challenges, while the Baltic
Earth research can also benefit operational oceanography. Most
of the research databases such as the Baltic Environmental
Database (BED, http://nest.su.se/bed) at Stockholm University,
the Swedish Ocean Archive (SHARK, http://sharkweb.smhi.
se) and all other environmental databases operated by the
Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI)
and the German Baltic Sea monitoring data archive (IOWDB,
http://iowmeta.io-warnemuende.de and https://odin2.io-
warnemuende.de/) operated by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic
Sea Research Warnemunde (IOW) are already open access.
In the future, a common database including both operational
and research data may be established. In Europe, EMODnet
has integrated marine observations, both online and offline
data, in the entire parameter domain ranging from physical,
biogeochemical, biological to human activities. In future, it
may play a more important and active role for linking research
observations and operational oceanography. However, for the
research of, for instance, detecting ocean changes high accuracy
of measurements is needed which is today not assured by all
operational data products. The calibration of measurement
devices is time consuming and expensive. Quality control is
also the reason why not all research data of IOWDB and other
databases can be provided in real or near real time.
Research observations can be an important complementary
in emerging observations for developing operational ecology,
predicting the fate of visible, and invisible marine plastics in
the Baltic Sea, modeling and forecasting sediment transport,
underwater noise etc. For these areas, operational observing
capacity has not been established yet. They will need to heavily
rely on data from research projects.
As mentioned above, reanalysis data sets are useful for climate
analysis and for the evaluation of climate models used within
Baltic Earth. However, current reanalysis data sets are usually not
based on first principles, i.e., the conservation of mass, energy
and momentum. Hence, many data assimilation schemes may
cause problems, for instance, for budget and flux calculations of
nutrients (Liu et al., 2017). This may lead to problems when using
reanalysis for trend and long-term variability analyses. Hence,
reanalysis products should be improved for the climate research
purpose by using more mass and energy conserved assimilation
method, e.g., 4D variational assimilation.
Research observing infrastructure should be made more
usable for various applications. Examples of observing systems
that fulfill such a criterion are the Australian IMOS (Integrated
Marine Observing System, Hill et al., 2009) system, the German
COSYNA (Coastal Observing System for the Northern and
Arctic Seas, Baschek et al., 2017) and the IOW long-term
monitoring program outside the German territorial waters.
Although funded as a research infrastructure, the programs
provide openly accessible observations, which can be used for
many other purposes. These systems have been operated for more
than 10 years.
The new knowledge made from the Baltic Earth research,
both on the processes and model system development, can
be transferred to the operational models, which will fill the
knowledge and technological gaps in the operational modeling.
The two communities should have regular joint meetings to
identify topics with common interests and make the technology
transfer from regional Earth system research to operational
oceanography. For such a working group Baltic Earth would
provide an ideal discussion platform. Unfortunately, state-of-the-
art climate and operational ocean model versions usually differ
although some institutes aim to have only one version for both
applications. However, in reality two model versions are still
needed because not all processes are well-enough understood
such that their parameterizations fulfill the requirements of
both applications on short and long time scales. An example
is diapycnical mixing. Climate models require that long-term