PUBLICACIONES

Estimation of primary production in the southern Argentine continental shelf and shelf-break regions using field and remote sensing data.

Remote Sensing of Environment, 140: 497-508. (2014).

The Argentine continental shelf and shelf-break regions comprise a large and rich biological area of the ocean.
However, field estimations of primary production are scarce, making remote sensing of ocean color a valuable tool to provide synoptic maps of primary production in this ecologically relevant region. Field studies performed during spring 2005, and summer and winter 2006 showed a high spatial and seasonal variability in the daily in-tegrated water column primary production, chlorophyll-a and biomass-normalized photosynthetic parameters.
Using field measurements, five different and relatively simple (non-spectral and vertically homogeneous bio-mass) models were tested: three chlorophyll-, one carbon- and one absorption-based model. The chlorophyll-based ‘BIOM’ model developed by Platt and Sathyendranath (Science, 241:1613–1620, 1988) provided the closest estimates to the field values, and was selected as the local algorithm. Its performance was assessed using simultaneous satellite-derived products and field photosynthetic parameters as input. Close values compared to the field estimates were obtained using BIOM (Absolute Percent Difference error, APD ~10%), even though satellite-derived products used as input to the model (i.e. chlorophyll-a concentration, diffuse attenuation coefficient in the photosynthetically active radiation range — PAR-, and PAR irradiance) showed relative high errors (APD ~40%, 20% and 50%, respectively). Provided that an efficient way to assign the physiological parameters in a pixel-by-pixel basis is found, this model seems to be the best to produce primary production maps from remote sensing of ocean color in the southern Argentine shelf and shelf-break regions

AUTORES:
Dogliotti, A.I., Lutz, V.A., and Segura, V.