Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
79 lines (60 loc) · 5.79 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

79 lines (60 loc) · 5.79 KB

bc_lightstation_sst

Data page for BC lightstation sea-surface temperature data. The webpage can be found here and not at the github-pages link (which incorrectly points to the previous repository owner). This site is updated twice a year. All figures are provisional.

Make plots of British Columbia lightstation sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies and compute the linear trends and confidence limits. Compute the monthly mean anomalies by subtracting monthly mean climatologies for 1991-2020 from the monthly mean observations.

The data source for BC Lightstation Sea-surface Temperature and Salinity Data (Pacific), 1914-present, can be found here.

The BC Lightstation dataset is also available on CIOOS Pacific, but it is not updated as frequently and does not have any data after Nov. 2019 (as of Aug. 2023).

Processing order:

  1. convert_txt_to_csv.py
    • May not be needed if csv-format data files are available
    • Convert txt data files to csv file format for easier access with pandas
  2. lightstation_sst_climatology.py
    • Monthly mean climatologies for each station for the period 1991-2020
    • Does not need to be rerun if using the 1991-2020 climatologies
  3. sst_monthly_mean_anomalies.py
    • Compute monthly mean anomalies by subtracting monthly mean data from the 1991-2020 climatology
  4. trend_estimation.py (run via run_trend_estimation.py)
    • Estimate the trends in SST anomalies using least-squares and Theil-Sen regression
    • Compute confidence intervals on the least-squares trends using the nonparametric Monte Carlo approach described by Cummins & Masson (2014)
  5. plot_lightstation_temperature.py
    • plot_data_gaps() Data availability for each station for all time
    • plot_daily_filled_anomalies() Data from most recent year plotted on top of average for all time for each station
    • plot_monthly_anomalies() Least-squares and confidence intervals of time series anomalies
    • plot_daily_T_statistics() Density of temperature and temperature anomalies by 30-year period (1994-2023, 1964-1993, 1934-1963, 1904-1933) with boxplots.

Mapping scripts:

  • get_lightstation_coords_from_txt.py: Get coordinates of lightstations from txt data files
  • map_lightstation_points.py: Make a Basemap plot showing the locations of each lightstation

Other scripts:

  • lighthouse_sst_range_check.py: Check if all data are within the "accepted" range for coastal North Pacific sea-surface temperature, as defined by the NOAA World Ocean Database (WOD18; Garcia et al., 2018)
  • anomaly_method_differences.py: Compare the monthly mean anomaly values calculated from daily observations and from monthly mean observations
Details & Background

anomaly_method_differences.py compares two ways of calculating monthly mean anomalies. One method is to subtract the climatology from daily data to get daily anomalies, then take monthly means of the daily anomalies (see sst_daily_anomalies_deprec.py). The other method is to subtract the climatology from monthly mean data to get the monthly mean anomalies (see sst_monthly_mean_anomalies.py). The second method agrees with other data collection projects by IOS so is used here.

It is necessary to account for serial correlation within the data records when estimating confidence limits around trends. To account for this feature, two methods are offered for calculating confidence limits. The first is described by Thomson & Emery (2014, pp. 272-275) and assumes that the number of degrees of freedom for the t-distribution are given by the effective number of degrees of freedom, ν=N*-2, where N* (<N) is the effective sample size. N* is calculated from the integral timescale T for the data record, where T in turn depends on the autocovariance function. ν is used to calculate the confidence limits on the trend (e.g., using the least-squares formula for confidence limits). This method will be referenced as the "effective sample size" method.

The second method is a Monte Carlo approach used by Cummins & Masson (2014). This is better to use if the autocorrelation structure is not approximated well by a first-order autoregressive process (AR-1) process. The anomaly data is detrended by subtracting the ordinary least squares trend from it. Then 50,000 random time series are generated having the same autocorrelation structure as the data record using a discrete inverse Fourier transform followed by a discrete Fourier transform. The trend of each is estimated with Theil-Sen regression. The 95% confidence interval on the trend of the true time series is then taken as the 95% confidence interval on the set of trends of the random time series. The functions in trend_estimation.py used for this method were translated from MatLab scripts written by Patrick Cummins.

References

Cummins, P. F. & Ross, T. (2020). Secular trends in water properties at Station P in the northeast Pacific: An updated analysis. Progress in Oceanography, 186(2020). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2020.102329

Cummins, P. F. & Masson, D. (2014). Climatic variability and trends in the surface waters of coastal British Columbia. Progress in Oceanography, 120(2014), pp. 279–290. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2013.10.002

Garcia, H. E., T. P. Boyer, R. A. Locarnini, O. K. Baranova, M. M. Zweng (2018). World Ocean Database 2018: User’s Manual (prerelease). A.V. Mishonov, Technical Ed., NOAA, Silver Spring, MD (Available at https://www.NCEI.noaa.gov/OC5/WOD/pr_wod.html).

Thomson, R. E., & Emery, W. J. (2014). Data Analysis Methods in Physical Oceanography: Second and Revised Edition (3rd ed.). Elsevier Science.