C
Cecile S. Rousseaux
Researcher at Universities Space Research Association
Publications - 38
Citations - 2230
Cecile S. Rousseaux is an academic researcher from Universities Space Research Association. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytoplankton & Ocean color. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 34 publications receiving 1677 citations. Previous affiliations of Cecile S. Rousseaux include Goddard Space Flight Center & University of Western Australia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
An extreme climatic event alters marine ecosystem structure in a global biodiversity hotspot
Thomas Wernberg,Dan A. Smale,Fernando Tuya,Fernando Tuya,Mads S. Thomsen,Tim J. Langlois,Thibaut de Bettignies,Scott Bennett,Cecile S. Rousseaux +8 more
TL;DR: In 2011, the waters along the west coast of Australia experienced an unprecedented (in recorded times) warming event with warming anomalies of 2-4°C that persisted for more than ten weeks.
Journal ArticleDOI
An overview of approaches and challenges for retrieving marine inherent optical properties from ocean color remote sensing.
P. Jeremy Werdell,Lachlan I. W. McKinna,Emmanuel Boss,Steven G. Ackleson,Susanne E. Craig,Susanne E. Craig,Watson W. Gregg,Zhongping Lee,Stéphane Maritorena,Collin S. Roesler,Cecile S. Rousseaux,Cecile S. Rousseaux,Dariusz Stramski,James M. Sullivan,Michael S. Twardowski,Maria Tzortziou,Maria Tzortziou,Xiaodong Zhang +17 more
TL;DR: A synopsis of the current state of the art in the retrieval of core optical properties from satellite ocean color is presented and recommendations for future investment for upcoming missions whose instrument characteristics diverge sufficiently from heritage and existing sensors to warrant reassessing current approaches are made.
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Interannual Variation in Phytoplankton Primary Production at a Global Scale
TL;DR: A modeling and data assimilation perspective to phytoplankton partitioning of primary production is provided and the effects of climate variability on group-specific primary production are assessed using global and “regional” climate indices.
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Decadal trends in global pelagic ocean chlorophyll: A new assessment integrating multiple satellites, in situ data, and models.
TL;DR: The results indicated no significant trend in global pelagic ocean chlorophyll over the 15 year data record and suggested the present effort provides a path forward to quantifying global ocean trends using multiple satellite missions, which is essential to understand the state, variability, and possible changes in the global oceans over longer time scales.
Journal ArticleDOI
Satellite sensor requirements for monitoring essential biodiversity variables of coastal ecosystems
Frank E. Muller-Karger,Erin L. Hestir,C. Ade,Kevin R. Turpie,Dar A. Roberts,David A. Siegel,Robert J. Miller,David C. Humm,Noam R. Izenberg,M. R. Keller,Frank Morgan,Robert Frouin,Arnold G. Dekker,Royal C. Gardner,James A. Goodman,Blake A. Schaeffer,Bryan A. Franz,Nima Pahlevan,Antonio Mannino,Javier A. Concha,Steven G. Ackleson,Kyle C. Cavanaugh,Anastasia Romanou,Maria Tzortziou,Maria Tzortziou,Emmanuel Boss,Ryan Pavlick,Anthony Freeman,Cecile S. Rousseaux,John P. Dunne,Matthew C. Long,Eduardo Klein,Galen A. McKinley,Joachim Goes,Ricardo M. Letelier,Maria T. Kavanaugh,Mitchell A. Roffer,Astrid Bracher,Kevin R. Arrigo,Heidi M. Dierssen,Xiaodong Zhang,Frank W. Davis,Ben Best,Robert P. Guralnick,John R. Moisan,Heidi M. Sosik,Raphael M. Kudela,Colleen B. Mouw,Andrew H. Barnard,Sherry L. Palacios,Collin S. Roesler,Evangelia G. Drakou,Ward Appeltans,Walter Jetz +53 more
TL;DR: Enabling H4 imaging is vital for the conservation and management of global biodiversity and ecosystem services, including food provisioning and water security.