NDBC Data Management of IOOS Data Dawn Petraitis, Kevin Kern,

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NDBC Data Management of IOOS Data Dawn Petraitis, Kevin Kern, and Shannon McArthur National Data Buoy Center Stennis Space Center, MS May 24, 2017

Summary of Topics Data flow from IOOS data provider to NDBC and GTS Measurements accepted by NDBC Station IDs NDBC XML format Quality Control overview GTS format Historical data Future work

How does data flow from IOOS to NDBC?

Measurements accepted by NDBC Meteorological Winds (direction, speed, gust), air temperature, dew point, relative humidity, barometer, sea surface temperature, wave height, dominant period, mean wave direction, short wave and long wave radiation Oceanographic Sub-surface water temperature and salinity (30 depths) Ocean currents (70 depths/bins) Dissolved oxygen (near surface and near bottom), turbidity, chlorophyll, tides, pH, EH Waves Directional and non-directional (bulk and spectral)

What is needed to send data to NDBC? Location, station name, and list of measurements Station ID assigned by NDBC Moored buoys and coastal stations require different IDs FTP account assigned by NDBC Data will be automatically pushed to comms.ndbc.noaa.gov XML format message XML tags to be included will depend on data sent to NDBC

Assignment of Station IDs Moored buoys require a 5-digit WMO ID ID is region-specific Land-based fixed stations require a 5- character alpha-numeric ID ID is from the NWS Location Identifier system Each state has a specific code All station IDs are assigned by NDBC when we are notified of a new station by the RA/operator Unique IDs are important for distribution on the GTS

XML Format Tags - Met

XML Format Tags - Ocean

XML Format Tags - TESAC

XML Format Tags - Supplemental

XML Format Tags - Missing

XML Format Tags – Spectral Wave

XML Format Tags – Spectral Wave Missing

XML Message Example Met and Ocean

XML Message Example– Spectral Wave Non-directional

XML Message Example – Spectral Wave Directional

Quality Control of IOOS Data All data is run through automated QC upon receipt NDBC runs QARTOD checks Automated QC Handbook available on NDBC website http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/NDBCHandbookofA utomatedDataQualityControl2009.pdf Lists the algorithms used and all flags GTS bulletins are generated after auto QC is complete

Auto QC Flags Hard flags stop data from being distributed on GTS and web

Auto QC Flags Soft flags are an advisory to the data analyst Do not stop data from being distributed

Manual Quality Control NDBC Mission Control Center performs manual QC on a daily basis Reviews all met, wave, and ocean data Report on all daily QC activities sent to partners Available on NDBC website: http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/pstat.shtml

GTS Data Three types of GTS messages Met, Wave, and Temp/Salinity/Ocean Currents (TESAC) No limit on frequency to the GTS Some NDBC stations now sending data every 10 minutes Bio/geo/chemical data (oxygen, chlorophyll, pH, etc.) not sent out via GTS GTS distributes data for use by weather and ocean models and forecasters

Other Methods of Data Distribution All data sent to NDBC is displayed on website in real time Tabular ASCII text and graphical format NetCDF format available on our DODS server http://dods.ndbc.noaa.gov/

Historical Data NDBC does not archive IOOS data with NCEI Maintain historical data records on our website and on DODS server

IOOS Data Availability NDBC sends report to RAs each month Represents the percent of hours each month that an IOOS station reports data to the GTS Internal reports for message counts and data availability

Future Work Change from 5-digit WMO IDs to 7-digit WMO IDs for GTS BUFR format Will not require new WMO IDs for existing stations Distribute data in BUFR format on GTS BUFR format allows for more metadata Will not change what variables are distributed on GTS unless a new template is released Data Quality Improvement Project Review our auto and manual QC procedures Work with IOOS Program Office to better quantify the volume of IOOS observations going to the GTS

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