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Towards a Model of Ocean Biogeochemical Processes
(Englisch)
Nato ASI Subseries I: (closed) 10, NATO ASI Series 10
Evans, Geoffrey T. & Fasham, Michael J.R.

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Towards a Model of Ocean Biogeochemical Processes

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Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop Towards a Model of Ocean Biogeochemical Processes, held at Chateau de Bonas, France, May 3-9, 1992
Key biogeochemical events in the ocean take place in less than a second, are studied in experiments lasting a few hours, and determine cycles that last over seasons or even years. Models of the controlling processes thus have to take into account these time scales. This book aims at achieving consensus among these controlling processes at all relevant time scales. It helps understand the global carbon cycle including the production and breakdown of solved organic matter and the production, sinking and breakdown of particles. The emphasis on considering all time scales in submodel formulation is new and of interest to all those working in global ocean models and related fields.

Themes in modelling ocean biogeochemical processes.- Global extrapolation.- Fluctuations: a task package for the physicists.- Trophic resolution.- Modelling growth and light absorption in the marine diatom Skeletonema costatum.- Carbon: a phycocentric view.- Towards a general deillegalscription of phytoplankton growth for biogeochemical models.- Modelling zooplankton.- Microbial processes and the biological carbon pump.- Dissolved organic matter in biogeochemical models of the ocean.- Modelling particle fluxes.- The significance of interannual variability.- Some parametric and structural simulations with a three-dimensional ecosystem model of nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic euphotic zone.- Data assimilation for biogeochemical models.- An annotated bibliography of marine biological models.- List of participants.




Themes in modelling ocean biogeochemical processes.- Global extrapolation.- Fluctuations: a task package for the physicists.- Trophic resolution.- Modelling growth and light absorption in the marine diatom Skeletonema costatum.- Carbon: a phycocentric view.- Towards a general deillegalscription of phytoplankton growth for biogeochemical models.- Modelling zooplankton.- Microbial processes and the biological carbon pump.- Dissolved organic matter in biogeochemical models of the ocean.- Modelling particle fluxes.- The significance of interannual variability.- Some parametric and structural simulations with a three-dimensional ecosystem model of nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic euphotic zone.- Data assimilation for biogeochemical models.- An annotated bibliography of marine biological models.- List of participants.


Inhaltsverzeichnis



Themes in modelling ocean biogeochemical processes.- Global extrapolation.- Fluctuations: a task package for the physicists.- Trophic resolution.- Modelling growth and light absorption in the marine diatom Skeletonema costatum.- Carbon: a phycocentric view.- Towards a general deillegalscription of phytoplankton growth for biogeochemical models.- Modelling zooplankton.- Microbial processes and the biological carbon pump.- Dissolved organic matter in biogeochemical models of the ocean.- Modelling particle fluxes.- The significance of interannual variability.- Some parametric and structural simulations with a three-dimensional ecosystem model of nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic euphotic zone.- Data assimilation for biogeochemical models.- An annotated bibliography of marine biological models.- List of participants.


Klappentext



Key biogeochemical events in the ocean take place in less than a second, are studied in experiments lasting a few hours, and determine cycles that last over seasons or even years. Models of the controlling processes thus have to take into account these time scales. This book aims at achieving consensus among these controlling processes at all relevant time scales. It helps understand the global carbon cycle including the production and breakdown of solved organic matter and the production, sinking and breakdown of particles. The emphasis on considering all time scales in submodel formulation is new and of interest to all those working in global ocean models and related fields.




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