FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI A Global Plankton Diversity Monitoring Program BT AF BATTEN, Sonia D. ABU-ALHAIJA, Rana CHIBA, Sanae EDWARDS, Martin GRAHAMS, George JYOTHIBABU, R. KITCHENER, John A. KOUBBIS, Philippe MCQUATTERS-GOLLOP, Abigail MUXAGATA, Erik OSTLE, Clare RICHARDSON, Anthony J. ROBINSON, Karen, V TAKAHASHI, Kunio T. VERHEYE, Hans M. WILSON, Willie AS 1:1;2:2;3:3,4;4:5;5:5;6:6;7:7;8:8;9:9;10:10;11:5;12:11,12;13:13;14:14;15:15,16;16:5; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:;5:;6:;7:;8:;9:;10:;11:;12:;13:;14:;15:;16:; C1 Marine Biol Assoc UK, CPR Survey, Nanaimo, BC, Canada. Cyprus Inst, Nicosia, Cyprus. Japan Agcy Marine Earth Sci & Technol JAMSTEC, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan. UNEP WCMC, Cambridge, England. Marine Biol Assoc UK, CPR Survey, Plymouth, Devon, England. CSIR, Reg Ctr, Natl Inst Oceanog, Kochi, Kerala, India. Australian Antarctic Div, Dept Environm & Energy, Kingston, Tas, Australia. Sorbonne Univ, BOREA Res Unit Biol Aquat Organisms & Ecosyst, Paris, France. Univ Plymouth, Ctr Marine & Conservat Policy Res, Plymouth, Devon, England. Univ Fed Rio Grande FURG, Lab Zooplancton, Rio Grande, Brazil. CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere, Brisbane, Qld, Australia. Univ Queensland, Fac Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia. Natl Inst Water & Atmospher Res, Christchurch, New Zealand. Natl Inst Polar Res, Tokyo, Japan. Univ Cape Town, Dept Biol Sci, Marine Res Inst, Cape Town, South Africa. Oceans & Coasts Res, Dept Environm Affairs, Cape Town, South Africa. C2 MBA, CANADA CYPRUS INST, CYPRUS JAMSTEC, JAPAN UNEP WCMC, UK MBA, UK CSIR, INDIA AUSTRALIAN ANTARCTIC DIV, AUSTRALIA UNIV PARIS 06, FRANCE UNIV PLYMOUTH, UK UNIV FED RIO GRANDE FURG, BRAZIL CSIRO OCEANS & ATMOSPHERE, AUSTRALIA UNIV QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA NIWA, NEW ZEALAND NIPR, JAPAN UNIV CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA OCEANS & COASTS RES, SOUTH AFRICA IN DOAJ IF 5.247 TC 44 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00689/80060/83064.pdf LA English DT Article CR REPCCOAI DE ;Continuous Plankton Recorder;zooplankton;phytoplankton;global monitoring;biodiversity;ocean observing;essential ocean variables AB Plankton are the base of marine food webs, essential to sustaining fisheries and other marine life. Continuous Plankton Recorders (CPRs) have sampled plankton for decades in both hemispheres and several regional seas. CPR research has been integral to advancing understanding of plankton dynamics and informing policy and management decisions. We describe how the CPR can contribute to global plankton diversity monitoring, being cost-effective over large scales and providing taxonomically resolved data. At OceanObs09 an integrated network of regional CPR surveys was envisaged and in 2011 the existing surveys formed the Global Alliance of CPR Surveys (GACS). GAGS first focused on strengthening the dataset by identifying and documenting CPR best practices, delivering training workshops, and developing an integrated database. This resulted in the initiation of new surveys and manuals that enable regional surveys to be standardized and integrated. GACS is not yet global, but it could be expanded into the remaining oceans; tropical and Arctic regions are a priority for survey expansion. The capacity building groundwork is done, but funding is required to implement the GACS vision of a global plankton sampling program that supports decision-making for the scientific and policy communities. A key step is an analysis to optimize the global sampling design. Further developments include expanding the CPR for multidisciplinary measurements via additional sensors, thus maximizing the ship-of-opportunity platform. For example, defining pelagic ecoregions based on plankton and ancillary data could support high seas Marine Protected Area design. Fulfillment of Aichi Target 15, the United Nation's Sustainable Development Goals, and delivering the Essential Ocean Variables and Essential Biodiversity Variables that the Global Ocean Observing System and Group on Earth Observation's Biodiversity Observation Network have, respectively, defined requires the taxonomic resolution, spatial scale and time-series data that the CPR approach provides. Synergies with global networks exploiting satellite data and other plankton sensors could be explored, realizing the Survey's capacity to validate earth observation data and to ground-truth emerging plankton observing platforms. This is required for a fully integrated ocean observing system that can understand global ocean dynamics to inform sustainable marine decision-making. PY 2019 PD JUL SO Frontiers In Marine Science SN 2296-7745 PU Frontiers Media Sa VL 6 IS 321 UT 000471700500001 DI 10.3389/fmars.2019.00321 ID 80060 ER EF