The Ocean Colour Climate Change Initiative: III. A Round-robin Comparison on In-water Bio-optical Algorithms

Robert J.W. Brewin, Shubha Sathyendranath, Dagmar Müller, Carsten Brockmann, Pierre-Yves Deschamps, Emmanuel Devred, Roland Doerffer, Norman Fomferra, Bryan Franz, Mike Grant, Steve Groom, Andrew Horseman, Chuanmin Hu, Hajo Krasemann, ZhongPing Lee, Stéphane Maritorena, Frédéric Mélin, Marco Peters, Trevor Platt, Peter RegnerTim Smyth, Francois Steinmetz, John Swinton, Jeremy Werdell, George N. White

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Satellite-derived remote-sensing reflectance (Rrs) can be used for mapping biogeochemically relevant variables, such as the chlorophyll concentration and the Inherent Optical Properties (IOPs) of the water, at global scale for use in climate-change studies. Prior to generating such products, suitable algorithms have to be selected that are appropriate for the purpose. Algorithm selection needs to account for both qualitative and quantitative requirements. In this paper we develop an objective methodology designed to rank the quantitative performance of a suite of bio-optical models. The objective classification is applied using the NASA bio-Optical Marine Algorithm Dataset (NOMAD). Using in situ Rrs as input to the models, the performance of eleven semi-analytical models, as well as five empirical chlorophyll algorithms and an empirical diffuse attenuation coefficient algorithm, is ranked for spectrally-resolved IOPs, chlorophyll concentration and the diffuse attenuation coefficient at 489 nm. The sensitivity of the objective classification and the uncertainty in the ranking are tested using a Monte-Carlo approach (bootstrapping). Results indicate that the performance of the semi-analytical models varies depending on the product and wavelength of interest. For chlorophyll retrieval, empirical algorithms perform better than semi-analytical models, in general. The performance of these empirical models reflects either their immunity to scale errors or instrument noise in Rrs data, or simply that the data used for model parameterisation were not independent of NOMAD. Nonetheless, uncertainty in the classification suggests that the performance of some semi-analytical algorithms at retrieving chlorophyll is comparable with the empirical algorithms. For phytoplankton absorption at 443 nm, some semi-analytical models also perform with similar accuracy to an empirical model. We discuss the potential biases, limitations and uncertainty in the approach, as well as additional qualitative considerations for algorithm selection for climate-change studies. Our classification has the potential to be routinely implemented, such that the performance of emerging algorithms can be compared with existing algorithms as they become available. In the long-term, such an approach will further aid algorithm development for ocean-colour studies.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalRemote Sensing of Environment
Volume162
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2015

Keywords

  • Phytoplankton
  • Ocean colour
  • Inherent Optical Properties
  • Remote sensing
  • Chlorophyll-a

Disciplines

  • Life Sciences

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