Open AccessJournal Article
OZCAR: the French network of Critical Zone Observatories: principlesand scientific objectives
Isabelle Braud,Jérôme Gaillardet,Fatim Hankard,Tanguy Le Borgne,Guillaume Nord,Delphine Six,Catherine Galy,Fatima Laggoun-Défarge,Tiphaine Tallec,Hélène Pauwels +9 more
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TL;DR: OZCAR as discussed by the authors is a distributed research infrastructure gathering instrumented sites and catchments on continental surfaces all dedicated to the observation and monitoring of the different compartments of the critical zone at national scale.
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Abstract: This contribution aims at presenting the principles that underlined the creation of the OZCAR research infras-
tructure, gathering various Critical Zone Observatories in France, and the scientific questions that drives the
observation settings.
The Critical Zone includes the fine zone between the lower atmosphere at the top of the canopy down to the
bedrock-soil interface. This lithosphere-atmosphere boundary is critical for the availability of life-sustaining
resources and critical for humanity because this is the zone where we live, where we build our cities, from which
we extract our food and our water and where we release most of our wastes. This is the fragile zone on which the
natural ecosystem relies because this is where nutrients are being released from the rocks.
OZCAR is a distributed research infrastructure gathering instrumented sites and catchments on continental
surfaces all dedicated to the observation and monitoring of the different compartments of the Critical Zone at
the national scale. All these observatories (more that 40) were all built up on specific questions (acid deposition,
flood prediction, urban hydrology. . . ), some of them more than 50 years ago, but they have all in common to
be highly instrumented, permanently funded as infrastructures. They all share the same overarching goal of
understanding and predicting the Critical Zone in a changing world. OZCAR gathers instrumented catchments,
hydrogeological sites, peatlands, glacier and permafrost regions and a spatial observatory under the common
umbrella of understanding water and biogeochemical cycles and the associated fluxes of energy by using natural
gradients and experimentation. Based on the collaboration with Southern Countries, OZCAR’s sites have a global
coverage including tropical areas and high mountainous regions in the Andes and the Himalaya.
OZCAR benefits from a French investments project called CRITEX (Innovative equipment for the critical zone,
https://www.critex.fr/critex-3/observatories/ ) that is centered on the development and deployment of innovative
instrumentation in the sites.
OZCAR was launched in 2016 under the leadership of the French Ministry in charge of Higher Education and
Research, assembling all French Research Institutions involved in environmental studies and with the ambition
of facilitating interdisciplinary research in terrestrial surfaces, stimulating instrumental development and being
visible at the international level.
The paper will presents the main common scientific questions, challenges in terms of instrumentation and
experimentation deployment, in particular in terms of co-location of sites, data base and modelling activities that
the OZCAR network plan to address in the next years.
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