2014
DOI: 10.3354/meps11023
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Comparison of gridded sea surface temperature datasets for marine ecosystem studies

Abstract: In assessing impacts of a changing environment on the structure and functioning of marine ecosystems, the challenge remains to distinguish the effects of noise and of temporal and spatial autocorrelation from environmental drivers of biotic change. One analytical approach is to de-trend the data and use the resulting residuals; an alternative method involves use of the raw anomalies and a reduction of the degrees of freedom (df ) to make the hypothesis testing more conservative. Here, we assess the comparabili… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…(2002), thereby generating monthly anomalies for each grid box. We then calculated the average monthly anomaly for two spatially weighted kernels, of standard deviation 250 and 500 km, centred on 67.5°N, 4.5°E in the Norwegian Sea (Boehme et al ., 2014; Todd et al ., 2008). That region of the Norwegian Sea is known to embrace the ocean area to which Scottish 1SW salmon migrate (Todd et al ., 2008).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(2002), thereby generating monthly anomalies for each grid box. We then calculated the average monthly anomaly for two spatially weighted kernels, of standard deviation 250 and 500 km, centred on 67.5°N, 4.5°E in the Norwegian Sea (Boehme et al ., 2014; Todd et al ., 2008). That region of the Norwegian Sea is known to embrace the ocean area to which Scottish 1SW salmon migrate (Todd et al ., 2008).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%