6  May  2009

TRANSMED (Pilot project)

Coordinator: Isabelle Taupier-Letage
Lab. d'Océanographie et de Biogéochimie (LOB), CNRS/Université de la Méditerranée, Antenne de Toulon, La Seyne/mer, France
Fax: + 33 (0)4 94 87 83 07

Project Summary:

TRANSMED aims, in fine, at developing a network for monitoring the surface of the Mediterranean, using ships of opportunity.  Indeed it is possible to record variability (potentially related to climatic changes) from  surface parameters, as shown from NW Spain coastal area data (Figure 1; see also the Hydro-Changes program).

Figure 1: 34-year record of the surface temperature near the islas Medes (NW Spain). Update courtesy Jordi Salat

Figure 2 represents such an optimal network, based on existing/actual shipping lines. It includes routes crossing the whole basins, sampling the dense water formation areas, and investigating poorly-known areas. Ferries are especially adequate, since they allow building time series with a relatively high temporal scale. Thus it is generally possible to correctly describe the mesoscale, which is present everywhere in the Mediterranean. Moreover a network allows a (quasi)synoptic view at the basin scale. Usually sub-sampled data are sent in real time (via Inmarsat), and contribute to operational oceanography.

The basic equipment is a thermosalinometer, which records the hydrological (temperature and salinity) parameters. Other instruments such as fluorometers (for phytoplankton chlorophyll determination) and biogeochemical sensors (for dissolved oxygen, pCO2, nutrients…) can also be added, possibly completed by a meteorological station.

As a pilot phase, a SeaKeepers Module (thermosalinometer plus meteorological station)  and a fluorometer were installed on the SNCM car-ferry “Mediterranee”, which crosses the whole western basin from Marseilles to Algeria and Tunisia, approximately once per week (Figure 3).  The figure 4 illustrates  the results obtained during the summer 2006 on the Mareilles- Tunis line: positive anomaly of temperature in July, negative in August in the northern part of the basin. More importantly it shows the very fast response to the setting of the mistral wind late July in the Gulf of Lions: the temperature drops by 3-5°C within ~24 hours (upwelling).  NB: mention here the work done on the Cetacean observations? Thesis Cedric Cotté

The need/necessity to have an open, versatile and really autonomous system that would be simple and cheap appeared rapidly.  The CIESM fostered the development of such a prototype, realized by the Division Technique de l'iNSU (http://www.dt.insu.cnrs.fr/ ) (Figure 5). Tests were conducted on the french RV "Tethys 2", after the main functions of autonomy were implemented (commands of the pump, data acquisition and transmission). The TRANSMED protype was in piggyback with the main thermosalinometer installation: it performed as expected and satisfactorily (Figure 6-Figure 7). The final development of the TRANSMED system is presently stalled due to the lack of technical help.

In the future the idea is to have part of the ships equiped with the basic (cost-efficient) TRANSMED system (SBE45-based), for instance when there is no visibility on the route they are assigned to, or when maintenance is not expected to be easy , and to have the other part of the ships equipped with an improved TRANSMED system (SBE21-based),  that can accept additional sensors for multidisciplinarity. 


Figure 2: Potential routes for later Transmed development.

TRANSMED_slide2_what

Figure 3

TRANSMED_slide3_results

Figure 4

TRANSMED prototype

Figure 5

proto 3

Figure 6

proto_4

Figure 7: blue: TRANSMED prototype temperature (SBE 45) , green: RV  installation (SBE  21 and SBE 3S). The offset is due to the different locations of their respective intakes.

Project chronology:

  • March 2005: installation of the SeaKeepers system, beginning of the pilot phase.
  • 2006:  "operationnal" pilot phase 
  • 1st semester 2006:  conception and developement  of the CIESM TRANSMED prototype (work done by P-M. Theveny, Division Technique de l'INSU)
  • 2nd semester 2006:  tests of the prototype on the french RV "Tethys 2"
  • 2007:  definitive stop of the pilot phase SeaKeepers installation
  • 2009:  sept-dec.: CIESM TRANSMED prototype update (program HyMex contribution )
  • 2010: planned: completion and industrialisation
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Cooperating agencies:

DT INSU, LOB/CNRS/Université de la Méditerranée, Région Provence Alpes Côte d'Azur, SeaKeepers, SNCM