A Blooming North Sea
Credit: ESA, Posted on: Monday, 16 June 2008, 06:46 CDT Download full size image
This Envisat image captures the green swirls of a phytoplankton bloom in the North Sea off the coast of eastern Scotland.
Phytoplankton, microscopic marine plants that drift near the surface of the sea, are by far the most abundant type of life found in the ocean.
The chlorophyll they collectively contain colour the ocean's waters, which provides a means of detecting these tiny organisms from space with dedicated ocean colour sensors, like Envisat's Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) instrument.
Globally, phytoplankton are a major influence on the amount of carbon in the atmosphere, and hence need to be modelled into calculations of future climate change. Just like land-based plants, they accumulate carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and store it in their tissues, making them potentially important carbon sinks.
To support ocean carbon cycle research, ESA’s GlobColour project has merged 55 terabytes of data from three state-of-the-art instruments aboard different satellites, including MERIS, MODIS aboard NASA’s Aqua and SeaWiFS aboard GeoEye’s Orbview-2, to produce a 10-year dataset of global ocean colour stretching from 1997 to 2007.
The ocean color datasets are freely available to the public via the GlobColour website.
MERIS acquired this image on May 7, 2008, working in Full Resolution mode to provide a spatial resolution of 300 m.
More Images

Ice Cold Sunrise on Mars.From the location of NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander, above the Martian arctic circle, the sun does no...

XMM-Newton’s Massive Discovery.The optical image that confirmed that 2XMM J083026+524133 is a distant cluster of galaxies, taken by...
Latest Thoughts
Getting the Most Out of Your Doctor
People May Instinctively Find Mates Based on Body Odor
Stopping Sinkholes and Street Floods
Childhood Obesity Also a Big Problem in China
Many Americans Motivated to Exercise by the Olympics
Women More Likely to Have Tattoos Removed













RSS Feeds