She et al.
Operational Oceanography and Earth System Science
Frontiers In Earth Science | www.frontlersln.org
5
February 2020 | Volume 8 | Article 7
TABLE 1 | Continued
Acronym
Explanation
Comment
References
IOWDB
Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research
Warnemünde Database
Oceanographic Database research with
Interactive Navigation (Odin 2)
https://odln2.lo-warnemuende.de/
IOWMETA
Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research
Warnemünde Data Portal
Marine observational data from the German
monitoring program
http://lowmeta.lo-warnemuende.de
IPCC
Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change
Performed assessment reports of past and
future changes In 1990, 1995, 2001,2008, and
2013
http://www.lpcc.ch
MARNET
Marine environmental monitoring network
Monitoring of the marine environment
https://www.bsh.de/EN/DATA/
Marlne_envlronment_monltorlng_network/
marlne_envlronment_monltorlng_network_node.
html
SHARK
Swedish Ocean Archive
Marine observational data from the Swedish
monitoring program
http://sharkweb.smhl.se
SMHI
Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological
Institute
Swedish center for weather forecasts and
climate scenarios
http://www.smhl.se
ROOS
Regional Ocean Observing System
Coordinated operational oceanography
research and services In
http://eurogoos.eu/reglonal-operatlonal-
oceanographlc-systems/
UERRA
Uncertainties In Ensembles of Regional
Reanalyses
Atmospheric reanalysls data used inter alia as
atmospheric forcing for ocean models
http://www.uerra.eu/
WCRP
World Climate Research Program
Analysis and prediction of Earth system change
https://www.wcrp-cllmate.org/
WMO
World Meteorological Organization
Intergovernmental organization with a
membership of 191 Member States and
Territories
https://www.wmo.int/
surface temperature, salinity, DO and fluorescence etc. in 1-
7 day sampling interval), moorings (hourly sampling of met-
ocean variables, T/S, currents, turbidity, DO and chlorophyll
fluorescence) and shallow water Argo profilers (T/S, DO and
chlorophyll fluorescence in 1-7 day sampling interval). Low
frequency (mostly monthly or less frequent) observations are
made by research vessels. Most of the operational observations
cover the coastal water, only a few moorings, Argo profiler
and ship stations cover the open Baltic Sea. In recent years,
the shallow water Argo profiler has been demonstrated as
an efficient tool for monitoring hydrographic conditions in
operational mode (Haavisto et al., 2018). There is also a potential
to derive the currents from the shallow water Argo profilers
(Roiha et al., 2018).
A recent survey on the observational infrastructure to BOOS
members showed that the member institutes (not including
Russian) own or have access to 211 tide gauges, 7 shallow
water Argo floats, 29 buoys, 22 Research Vessels (R/Vs), 6
Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROVs, e.g., gliders), 22 Acoustic
Doppler Current Profilers (ADCPs), 25 other fixed stations and
23 FerryBoxes. Not all of them are used for operational observing.
Most of the R/Vs are used for research and/or regular basin wide
environmental monitoring, coordinated by HELCOM.
Data Management
BOOS partners share their observations through a ftp-network.
This forms a basis for Baltic Sea in-situ Thematic Assembling
Center (BAL INS-TAC) in CMEMS and EMODnet (European
Marine Observation Data Network) Physics, which provide open
and free operational data access to users.
Major Challenges
The final goal for Baltic Sea observing is to build up a
sustainable, integrated, and cost-effective observing system,
which can fit for multi-purpose for operational, climate,
commercial, and ecological applications. BOOS observing will
be an important subsystem. Major gaps in the existing BOOS
observational network for operational oceanography are lack of
current measurements and profile observations (especially for
biogeochemical variables) in the open Baltic Sea (She, 2018b;
Le Traon et al., 2019). Key questions have to be answered: how
observations from other sectors can be used to fill the gaps;
if new observations are needed, which sampling schemes and
technologies should be applied and how to be combined to
generate a cost-effective gap-filling solution.
Operational Modeling—Current Status and
Major Challenges
The operational modeling activities in the Baltic Sea is
coordinated by BOOS Modeling Program (BMP) and
CMEMS BAL MFC (Baltic Sea Monitoring and Forecasting
Center), including joint research on operational model system
development, data assimilation, model calibration and validation
(cal/val), multi-model ensemble forecast, products generation,
and services.
Model Development
Operational modeling has a long history in the Baltic Sea. The
ocean wave forecast model (WAM) was developed in Europe
in the 1980s (WAMDI, 1988). Operational wave forecasts were
implemented in the late 1990s in Denmark and Finland (She and