Secchi disk

The modified Secchi disk design used in freshwaters

The Secchi disk, as created in 1865 by Angelo Secchi, is a plain white, circular disk (30 cm in diameter or approximately 12 inches) used to measure water transparency in bodies of water. The disc is mounted on a pole or line, and lowered slowly down in the water. The depth at which the disk is no longer visible is taken as a measure of the transparency of the water. This measure is known as the Secchi depth and is related to water turbidity. Since its invention the disk has also been used in a modified, smaller 20 cm diameter, black and white design to measure freshwater transparency.

History

The original Secchi disk was a plain white disk and it was used in the Mediterranean Sea.[1] [2] Today, a plain white, 30 cm (~ 12 inch) diameter Secchi disk remains the standard design used in marine studies. In 1899 George C. Whipple modified the original all-white Secchi disk[3] to “…a disc about 8 inches in diameter, divided into quadrants painted alternately black and white like the target of a level-rod…”. [4] This modified black and white Secchi disk is the standard disk now used in limnology (freshwater) investigations.[5][6]

Secchi depth

Different kinds of Secchi disks. A marine style on the left and the freshwater version on the right

The Secchi depth is reached when the reflectance equals the intensity of light backscattered from the water. This depth in metres divided into 1.7 yields an attenuation coefficient (also called an extinction coefficient), for the available light averaged over the Secchi disk depth. While used as a variable, the extinction coefficient is also used as a variable for turbidity. The light attenuation coefficient, k, can then be used in a form of the Beer–Lambert law,

{I_z \over I_0} = e^{-kz}

to estimate Iz, the intensity of light at depth z from I0, the intensity of light at the ocean surface.[7]

The Secchi disk readings do not provide an exact measure of transparency, as there can be errors because of the sun's glare on the water, or one person may see the disk at one depth, but another person with better eyesight may see it at a greater depth. However, it is an inexpensive and straightforward method of measuring water clarity. Because of the potential for variation between practitioners, methods should be standardized as much as possible.

A Secchi disk measurement should always be taken off the shady side of a boat or dock between 9 am and 3 pm[8] The period for best results is between 10 am and 2 pm. The same observer should take Secchi depth measurements in the same manner every time. One can approach the measurement by lowering the disk beyond a point of disappearance, then raising it and lowering it slightly to set the Secchi depth. Another method is to record the depth at which the disk disappears, lower another few feet, then record the depth at which the disk reappears as it is slowly brought up. The Secchi depth is taken as the average of the two values.[9]

Secchi disk measurements have been an integral component of Minnesota's lake water quality assessment programs for some time; lake residents make periodic measurements and submit their readings to state and local agencies. The aggregated longitudinal data are used to reveal general trends in water quality. Similarly, the Indiana Clean Lakes Program trains and relies on volunteers to monitor turbidity in over 80 Indiana lakes using secchi disks, and uses data submitted by volunteers to monitor lake quality in the state.[10]

In 2013 a team of marine scientists established the global citizen science Secchi disk programme for seafarers to study the marine phytoplankton.[11] This citizen science Secchi disk study combines the traditional plain white, 30 cm diameter marine Secchi disk with mobile technology to upload Secchi depth data collected from the sea to a central database. The study was begun in response to a controversial scientific report that suggested the phytoplankton, which influence water transparency, had declined by 40% in the oceans between the years 1950 and 2008.[12][13]

Secchi disk measurements do not indicate how attenuation changes with depth or particular wavelengths of light. Submarine photometers can operate at depths of 150 m and can record visible, ultraviolet and infrared parts of the spectrum. Turbidimeters have their own light source and can measure transparency with scientific accuracy.[14]

See also

References

  1. On the history of the Secchi disc
  2. "Relazione delle esperienze fatte a bordo della pontificia pirocorvetta l’Immacolata concezione per determinare la trasparenza del mare" Memoria del P. A. Secchi. Il Nuovo Cimento, December 1864, Volume 20, Issue 1, pp 205-238
  3. Cialdi, M. and Secchi, P. A. (1865). “Sur la Transparence de la Mer.” Comptes Rendu de l'Acadamie des Sciences. 61: 100–104.
  4. Whipple, George C. (1899). The Microscopy of Drinking-Water. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 73–5.
  5. The Secchi Disk—What Is It? Accessed 2012-07-05.
  6. Why a Black and White Secchi Disk? Accessed 2012-07-05.
  7. Idso, Sherwood B. and Gilbert, R. Gene (1974) On the Universality of the Poole and Atkins Secchi Disk: Light Extinction Equation British Ecological Society.
  8. Lind, Owen, T. (1979). Handbook of Common Methods in Limnology St. Louis:C.V. Mosby Co.
  9. Cole, Gerald A. (1994). Textbook of Limnology. 4th ed. Prospect Heights:Waveland Press Inc.
  10. "Indiana Clean Lakes Program – Volunteer Monitoring". Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  11. Marine Secchi Disk study
  12. Ocean greenery under warming stress
  13. Global phytoplankton decline over the past century
  14. Undersea exploration. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved October 01, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online.

Further reading

External links