Ocean observatories can collect data for different purposes from scientific research to
environmental monitoring for marine operations or governance for the benefit of economy and society as a whole. Ocean observatories provide real-time, or near real time data allowing to detect changes as they happen, such as geo-hazards for example. Furthermore, continuous time series data allow to investigate interannual-to-decadal changes and to capture episodic events, changes in ocean circulation, water properties, water mass formation and ecosystems, to quantify air-sea fluxes, and to analyse the role of the oceans for the climate. The data collected by the several ocean observatories around the globe on the sub-sea-floor, seafloor, and water column, allows to improve our knowledge of the ocean including: • Ocean physics and
climate change • Biodiversity and ecosystem assessment •
Carbon cycle and ocean acidification • Geophysics and geodynamics Moreover, networks of ocean observatories can also be used to input data into global ocean models and to calibrate them thus allowing for the investigation of future changes in ocean circulation and ecosystems. ==See also==