diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0c4b034 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +# NOAA CEFI Portal + +The NOAA Climate, Ecosystems, and Fisheries Initiative (CEFI) portal provides data access, visualization tools, and climate science tutorials to assist stakeholders and decision-makers in understanding climate-related information. It emphasizes the use of regional ocean models (regional MOM6) to support ecosystem and fisheries management decisions. The source code in this repository represents the developing and public version of the [portal](https://psl.noaa.gov/cefi_portal/), offering transparency into its progress. External contributions are encouraged, including technical development, feature suggestions, and bug reports. You can submit issues or open pull requests to contribute. Additionally, a [Google Form](https://forms.gle/w5y3Q6DAJaKWCbkU8) is available for those unfamiliar with the GitHub interface. + +## 1 min CEFI +The goal of the Climate Ecosystem and Fisheries Initiative (CEFI) is to provide information about past and future conditions for US coastal regions ššš. Models need to be at a sufficient resolution to represent general coastal processes (on the order of 8-10 km horizontal resolution, although the grid may be of finer scale in the near future). In addition to historical simulation, seasonal forecasts (out to 1 year), decadal forecasts (out to 10 years) and long term projections (out to year 2100) will be made for several regions in the near future, including: (i) the Northwest Atlantic (US east coast, Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean), (ii) the Northeast Pacific (from Baja California to the Chukchi Sea in the Arctic), (iii) the Arctic, (iv) Pacific Islands including Hawaii, and (v) the Great Lakes. \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/data_access.html b/data_access.html index b5d3ad6..98731da 100644 --- a/data_access.html +++ b/data_access.html @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
+ The goal of the Climate Ecosystem and Fisheries Initiative (CEFI) is to provide information about past and future conditions for US coastal regions. + Models need to be at a sufficient resolution to represent general coastal processes (on the order of 8-10 km horizontal resolution, + although the grid may be of finer scale in the near future). In addition to historical simulation, seasonal forecasts (out to 1 year), + decadal forecasts (out to 10 years) and long term projections (out to 2100) will be made for several regions, including: +
+ Currently, the regional MOM6 output can be accessed through the PSL THREDDS server. + Users have the flexibility to choose their preferred method of data retrieval from this server. + Additionally, an alternative option involving AWS cloud storage is under consideration and may become available in the near future. + This option is currently undergoing testing. For direct access to the THREDDS server, go to the + catalog directly. +
++ + To access/download the data, the CEFI portal + model data access + offer couple different options. + +
+ Regional models have some benefits over global models, including being able to represent finer scale features more rapidly. + They can also be ātunedā (have their many parameter values adjusted) to better represent conditions in the region of interest. + While regional ocean models including the Regional Ocean Modeling System (ROMS) and Finite Volume Coastal Ocean Model (FVCOM) + have been developed and used for many years, NOAA did not have regional ocean model capability. Building off the expertise in + developing global models, the regional version of MOM6 has been developed particularly with fishery and ocean habitat applications in mind. +
++ The climate system is often simulated by coupling models representing different parts of the earth system together. + Common components include the atmosphere, ocean, sea ice, land, land vegetation, and ocean biogeochemistry. + Terminology varies depending on which components are included: +
++ The Modular Ocean Model, version 6 (MOM6) is the ocean component of the NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory + (GFDL)ās earth system model (ESM4). This model has been developed over several decades and is one of the worldās + premier ESMs. The MOM6 ocean model simulates physical ocean dynamics like ocean currents, temperature, and salinity, + and can be coupled to a sea ice model (SIS2) that simulates formation and melting of sea ice and an ocean biogeochemical + model (COBALT) that simulates nutrient cycling and lower trophic level dynamics. +
++ While the global version of MOM6 has existed for many decades, the regional version has been developed much more recently + and is still being improved. Simulating open lateral boundaries is a complex task, and it took time to add these capabilities + in a manner compatible with the global MOM6 configuration. A description of how these boundary conditions are implemented can + be found in the documentation paper for the northwest Atlantic implementation. Both the global and regional implementations use the same underlying code base. +
++ A regional ocean model always requires external input to prescribe what is happening at the surface and lateral boundaries; + that input usually comes from the output of a larger- and coarser-scale global model or a reanalysis, which combines a model + with observations. These boundary conditions play a strong driving role in any simulation, and a regional model will inherit + some of both the skill and biases of its parent model/reanalysis. A regional model is more than just a high-resolution filter + for the parent model; it can resolve dynamics not possible at a coarser scale, and also can add new processes not present in + the parent (for example, extra biological complexity). This can alleviate biases from the parent model. But at the same time, + some biases can be amplified in the regional model output. The resulting features in a regional model will always be a combination + of the parent modelās dynamics and its own internal dynamics. +
++ Different types of regional simulations can be run by pairing a regional MOM6 domain with different types of parent + models/datasets for its atmospheric and boundary condition forcing. The terminology for these different simulation + types -- historical, forecast, projection, etc. -- is not standardized across the field and can be confusing. + Here's a brief summary of the CEFI simulations and our chosen terminology: +
++ Historical simulations: CEFI's historical simulations attempt to simulate real-world conditions in the recent past. + They derive their input forcing from a global reanalysis. Reanalyses combine model dynamics and observations using + a process known as data assimilation. Regional historical runs can be used to measure the skill of the model compared + to observations. They also play many roles in research and ecosystem management: to fill in spatiotemporal gaps in + observations, provide a physical basis to drive fisheries and other ecosystem models, initialize forecasts, and many more. + Note that our historical simulations do not themselves assimilate observations; they are simply forced by a data-assimilative + parent model. Sometimes historical simulations are referred to as āhindcastsā. +
++ Note on terminology: In some contexts, "historical" ESM or climate model simulations can refer the historical experiment + output of an earth system model intercomparison project (e.g., [CMIP6](https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-9-1937-2016)). + Unlike a reanalysis model, these ESMs are not directly tied to observations on initialization. They usually start from + a simulation designed to bring the internal dynamics into equilibrium under pre-industrial conditions (i.e. letting the + model approach its long-term average climate). They do not assimilate data and are tied to specific time periods only by + prescribed greenhouse gas emissions and atmospheric aerosols. A skillful ESM/GCM will capture real-world statistical variability + across interannual and decadal scales, but will not have a year-to-year match to the real world. For example, they will produce + warm or cold events like ENSO, but not specific heat waves when they occur in the real world. The CEFI suite does not currently + include this type of CMIP historical experiment simulation. +
++ Long-term forecasts: Decadal forecasts that are initialized once per year and extend to 10 years will be added. +
++ Forecast ensembles: Due to the chaotic nature of the climate system, very small differences in conditions at one + time can lead to large differences in future values. The SPEAR simulations account for this by running multiple + forecast simulations with slight differences in their initial conditions, producing an ensemble of forecasts that + can be used to quantify the uncertainty of predictions. The CEFI regional seasonal forecasts downscale 10 of these ensemble members. +
++ Note on terminology: Forecasts are usually run starting from near-present conditions to predict the future. + But they can also be initialized from past conditions. This type of forecast is sometimes referred to as a + retrospective forecast/reforecast. These differ from the historical simulations because they are not tied + to real-world data during the simulation period, only at their initialization time. The primary purpose of + these simulations is to assess the skill of a forecast model by comparing the forecasts to real-world data + (or to a reanalysis or historical simulation). +
++ Carbon, Ocean Biogeochemistry and Lower Trophics (COBALT) (version 2 COBALTv2, with enhancements for regional MOM6) + is the ocean biogeochemical model associated with MOM6. COBALTv3 includes 40 state variables that simulate nutrient + cycling for carbon, alkalinity, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, iron, silica, calcium carbonate, and lithogenic minerals, + as well as the food web dynamics of phytoplankton and zooplankton. +
++ The COBALT source code is included within the MOM6 component, and when active there is two-way feedback between ocean + and biogeochemical state variables (for example, temperature influences many of the biological rate parameters, while + phytoplankton biomass impacts solar radiation reaching and hence heating the water column). +
++ The regional MOM6 simulations use z* as the vertical coordinate. Itās essentially a height (z) based system but + shares some similarity with a terrain following (Ļ) coordinate system. Indeed, z* only differs from z when the + free-surface elevation is non-zero.The coordinate system transforms the moving boundary problem of the oceans free surface into a fixed domain. +
++ Alistair Adcroft, A., Jean-Michel Campin, J.-M., 2004: Rescaled height coordinates for accurate representation of + free-surface flows in ocean circulation models, Ocean Modelling, 7, 3ā4,269-284, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocemod.2003.09.003. +
++ Note that this is the model coordinate system - output is archived at set depth levels. +
+The goal of the Climate Ecosystem and Fisheries Initiative (CEFI) is to provide @@ -183,4 +163,3 @@