Studying the Sea-Surface Microlayer 2

Ocean Hues

Alex Ingle/SOI
Dec. 10 2019

My name is Kelly Luis and I am a PhD student at the University of Massachusetts-Boston. I study ocean color from remote sensing platforms and on this cruise, I am ground-truthing ocean color measurements from UAVs and satellites.

Hawaiian Blue Water
Growing up in Hawai’i, the ocean’s blue hues were the backdrop to my childhood. Whether I was riding the bus to school or at a family get together, the ocean was within eyesight and it always seemed blue. Studying optical oceanography, I learned the color of the ocean was influenced by the things in it (e.g. dust, phytoplankton, sediment, colored dissolved organic matter). Since Hawaiian waters have few particles and dissolved materials in it, the blue hues along the coastline are also influenced by sunlight bouncing off benthic habitats like coral reefs. Thus, we can use the color of the water to infer what is found in the water, or – in the case of clear waters such as those around shallow coral reefs – infer the water depth to the bottom.

Trichodesmium spp. Green-Yellow Water
For this cruise, we are measuring the absorption and reflectance slicks made from Trichodesmium spp., a marine cyanobacteria that fixes nitrogen (i.e. converts nitrogen gas into an organic form for cell growth) across tropical oceans. Trichodesmium spp. absorbs blue and red light, resulting in the appearance or reflectance of a green-yellow slick.

At the end of the day, one of the UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) picks up something exciting on its camera – an expansive trichodesmium slick stretching for miles, not far from R/V Falkor’s position. Jumping into action, the ship steams for an hour towards the exciting feature at which point Atreyu and SPIP (Surface Processes Instrument Platform) are deployed. To compliment the measurements made by SPIP, scientists on board Atreyu take samples of the slick. Time is of the essence, however, as the light is fading rapidly and some bad weather is rolling in.Alex Ingle/SOI

In the Wet Lab, we filter water to understand how particles and dissolved materials absorb light. After filtering water obtained from various depths using Niskin bottles attached to Falkor’s CTD (Conductivity, Temperature, and Depth rosette sampler) and the catamaran, we measure the absorption of our samples on a spectrophotometer, an instrument that measures the absorbance of light at different wavelengths. A few days ago, we filtered water from a fresh Trichodesmium spp. slick and observed a pink hue from phycoerythrin. Phycoerythrin is a light harvesting pigment found in Trichodesmium and other cyanobacteria.

After filtering water from a fresh Trichodesmium spp. slick, Kelly Luis (PhD Student, University of Massachusetts, Boston) and Ajit Subramaniam (Co-Principal Investigator, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University) observed a pink hue from phycoerythrin. Phycoerythrin is a light harvesting pigment found in Trichodesmium and other cyanobacteria.Alex Ingle/SOI

The remaining colors not absorbed by particles and dissolved materials in the water are scattered in different directions. The light that is scattered back to the surface is the reflectance that can be measured from UAVs and satellites. On the Falkor, we measure reflectance with profiling, floating, and hand-held radiometers. The profiling radiometer measures changes in light at 14 wavelengths from 380 to 705 nm with depth while the floating radiometer measures changes in reflectance due to light leaving and entering the sea surface. We also use hand-held radiometers that measures the reflectance changes due to sunlight and skylight bouncing off the sea surface. The collection of these reflectance measurements helps us ground-truth UAV and satellite reflectance measurements. Ultimately, pairing the absorption and reflectance measurements helps us develop bio-optical algorithms to detect Trichodesmium spp. blooms across ocean color imagery.

Joshua O’Brien (Marine Technician) lifts the hyperspectral radiometer into position for deployment. This floating device measures light across a series of wavelengths.

Your Water?
You can measure water color too! CyAN, Hydrocolor, and Eye on Water are free phone-apps you can measure water color properties using the camera on your phone, and you can compare your phone estimates with publicly accessible satellite images from NASA, NOAA, and USGS. Have fun learning about your water’s many colors and what may be present in the waters around you!


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