About this Research Topic
(i) Establish whether or not oceans, seas and other water bodies underwent substantive changes traceable to COVID-19 lockdowns, and assess the type and magnitude of these impacts, if any.
(ii) Leverage all possible datasets and tools (Observations: remote platforms, in situ, historical, climatology; Modeling & Simulations: circulations, currents, what-if scenarios; Advanced tools: data mining, machine learning, artificial intelligence) covering varied possible aspects of the coastal and deeper oceans (physical, biological, geochemical, ecological, dynamics, thermodynamics & air-sea interactions) to conduct critical analysis of small to large scale changes in the ocean, seas and coasts, associated with the lockdown.
(iii) Use COVID-19 lockdowns to better understand the short period changes and long term impacts of extended periods of reduced anthropogenic activity, and hence the future climate.
In summary, the Research Topic focuses on assessing the response of the coastal and global oceans to the possible impact of reduced anthropogenic activities linked to the COVID-19 pandemic. Assessment of such impacts on the oceans is necessary given their strong memory and hence their manifestation at a later stage. This Research Topic solicits original research findings, reviews, short communications, and letters in the broad areas of (but not limited to):
• State of the coastal and deeper oceans in the COVID-19 era
• Coastal and the open ocean ecological changes before-during-after lockdowns
• Ocean observations and climate data collection in a post-pandemic scenario
• Ocean physics, biogeochemistry, energetics and pollution: observations and modeling of coastal and open oceans
• Air-sea interactions with special emphasis on assessing the role of anthropogenic contributions in modulating ocean dynamics, thermodynamics and ecosystem dynamics
• Observing the world oceans: the enhanced role of remote platforms in the lockdowns’ era
*Please note: Due to the circumstances surrounding COVID-19, COVID-19 specific manuscript submissions to this Research Topic received by 31st December 2020 will be automatically entitled to a full waiver.*
Keywords: Coastal Ecology, Oceanography, Satellite & in-situ observations, Model Simulations, Marine Pollution, COVID-19 lockdowns
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.