Abstract
Ocean primary production is a key process that regulates marine
ecosystems and the global climate, but its estimation is still affected
by multiple uncertainties. Typically, the chlorophyll-a concentration
(CHL) is used to characterise this process, as it is considered a proxy
of phytoplankton biomass. To date, the most common observing systems for
studying CHL are ocean colour satellites and BGC-Argo floats. Those are
complementary systems: satellite observations provide global coverage
but are limited to the ocean surface, while BGC-Argo floats provide
punctual observations along the whole water column. Comparison of these
two observing systems has been performed only at regional or
single-float scales, while at global scale this results in large
uncertainties due to the relatively low and irregular BGC-Argo coverage.
Here, we propose a different method, by comparing satellite and BGC-Argo
climatological annual time series within seven different bioregions,
each characterised by a homogeneous phytoplankton phenology, allowing us
to smooth the uncertainties. By comparing the mean values, the
amplitudes, and the shapes of the two time series, we are able to
identify regions (a) where they agree (58-61% of the ocean surface
area); (b) where the BGC-Argo float network should be extended
(generally regions with less than 5 profiles each 100x100 km2 square);
(c) where the discrepancy is likely due to satellite or (d) BGC-Argo
performance. Use of either BGC-Argo and satellite data in regions b—d
should be carried carefully and we provide, for each region, suggestions
on which system could be affected by the largest uncertainties.