Of the activities of DWD (German Weather Service) within the Global Climate Observing
System (GCOS), only the marine meteorological activities are described here because they are
directly related to GOOS and are routinely co-ordinated with the oceanographic monitoring
system.
Contribution by the Bundesamt für Seeschiffahrt und Hydrographie (BSH),
Hamburg and Rostock
- Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency -
For the time being, the BSH’s contribution covers the following three programme areas:
BSH-P1: Physical and chemical long-term monitoring of the North Sea and Baltic Sea,
including influences from the Northeast Atlantic Ocean
BSH-P2: Climate related monitoring in the North Atlantic Ocean
BSH-P3: Operational oceanographic services, e.g. water level and storm surge
forecasting services and ice service, and German Oceanographic Data Centre
(DOD)
The BSH's GOOS contribution comprises only programmes carried out within the framework
of its statutory tasks or international commitments, which means that no additional costs are
incurred in the initial phase of GOOS.
BSH-P1 - Physical and chemical long-term monitoring of the North Sea and Baltic Sea,
including influences from the Northeast Atlantic
Objectives
This part of the BSH’s contribution to GOOS has the following objectives:
(1) to describe and assess the present physical and chemical states,
(2) to describe and assess the temporal development of the physical and chemical states,
(3) to describe and assess the fate of substances in the individual compartments (water,
suspended particulate matter (SPM), sediment),
(4) to monitor the open boundaries of the North Sea (possibly in co-operation with foreign
partners)
Present scientific knowledge
Hydrographic conditions in the North Sea are determined by transports of heat, dissolved and
suspended matter across its boundaries, by freshwater input from continental rivers and by
local interactions with the atmosphere and sediment. The mean hydrographic state of the
German Bight in terms of temperature and salinity, mean currents and waves as well as their
variability is sufficiently well known. However, an adequate amount of recent data is only
available for sea temperature, mainly surface temperature. The only routinely recorded
temperature data from deeper layers suitable for GOOS purposes presently is provided by the
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