Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)

The circulation in Kachemak Bay is driven primarily by the 8-meter tidal flux. Regional circulation is characterized by generally cyclonic ocean currents in the Gulf of Alaska flowing onto the shelf off of Cook Inlet. Nutrient rich bottom water is upwelled and mixed with surface water. These enriche...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Angela Doroff
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Gulf of Alaska Data Portal
Subjects:
pH
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/df35b.44.10
id dataone:df35b.44.10
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:df35b.44.10 2024-10-03T18:46:12+00:00 Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013) Angela Doroff Kachemak Bay, Cook Inlet ENVELOPE(-151.89612,-151.1094,59.70567,59.37053) BEGINDATE: 2001-07-12T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-06-21T00:00:00Z 2013-07-15T23:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/df35b.44.10 unknown Gulf of Alaska Data Portal exxon valdez oil spill exxon valdez oil spill trustee council EVOSTC Kachemak Bay Cook Inlet National Estuarine Research Reserve System NERR KBRR water quality temperature conductivity salinity dissolved oxygen vented level pH tubidity chlorophyll fluorescence environmental drivers Dataset dataone:urn:node:GOA 2024-10-03T18:06:18Z The circulation in Kachemak Bay is driven primarily by the 8-meter tidal flux. Regional circulation is characterized by generally cyclonic ocean currents in the Gulf of Alaska flowing onto the shelf off of Cook Inlet. Nutrient rich bottom water is upwelled and mixed with surface water. These enriched waters may enter into Kachemak Bay, the inflow tending to stay along the southern shore flowing past the Seldovia instruments, while water flowing out of the bay stays along the Inner Bay and north shore, flowing past the Homer instruments. These trapped coastal flows separate the bay into two distinct ecosystems, and the instruments are positioned to reflect this distinction. Within each system there is vertical stratification of the water. The vertical placement of the sondes is designed to help elucidate the differences in circulation of the surface and deep waters. As the inflowing water proceeds up the bay, fresh water runoff from the surrounding ice fields and watersheds dilute the salinity and increase the sediment load in the path of the Homer instruments. The in-flowing water, in the path of the Seldovia instruments, initially supports a marine system, while the northern out-flowing water of the Homer instruments is more estuarine. The Kachemak Bay water quality instruments capture this difference with deployments along the north and south shores. These data will be used to supplement studies on primary productivity, larval distribution, settlement, recruitment, growth rates, community dynamics, and biodiversity in the bay. Dataset Kachemak Alaska Gulf of Alaska Data Portal (via DataONE) Gulf of Alaska Inner Bay ENVELOPE(-37.967,-37.967,-54.017,-54.017) ENVELOPE(-151.89612,-151.1094,59.70567,59.37053)
institution Open Polar
collection Gulf of Alaska Data Portal (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:GOA
language unknown
topic exxon valdez
oil spill
exxon valdez oil spill trustee council
EVOSTC
Kachemak Bay
Cook Inlet
National Estuarine Research Reserve System
NERR
KBRR
water quality
temperature
conductivity
salinity
dissolved oxygen
vented level
pH
tubidity
chlorophyll fluorescence
environmental drivers
spellingShingle exxon valdez
oil spill
exxon valdez oil spill trustee council
EVOSTC
Kachemak Bay
Cook Inlet
National Estuarine Research Reserve System
NERR
KBRR
water quality
temperature
conductivity
salinity
dissolved oxygen
vented level
pH
tubidity
chlorophyll fluorescence
environmental drivers
Angela Doroff
Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)
topic_facet exxon valdez
oil spill
exxon valdez oil spill trustee council
EVOSTC
Kachemak Bay
Cook Inlet
National Estuarine Research Reserve System
NERR
KBRR
water quality
temperature
conductivity
salinity
dissolved oxygen
vented level
pH
tubidity
chlorophyll fluorescence
environmental drivers
description The circulation in Kachemak Bay is driven primarily by the 8-meter tidal flux. Regional circulation is characterized by generally cyclonic ocean currents in the Gulf of Alaska flowing onto the shelf off of Cook Inlet. Nutrient rich bottom water is upwelled and mixed with surface water. These enriched waters may enter into Kachemak Bay, the inflow tending to stay along the southern shore flowing past the Seldovia instruments, while water flowing out of the bay stays along the Inner Bay and north shore, flowing past the Homer instruments. These trapped coastal flows separate the bay into two distinct ecosystems, and the instruments are positioned to reflect this distinction. Within each system there is vertical stratification of the water. The vertical placement of the sondes is designed to help elucidate the differences in circulation of the surface and deep waters. As the inflowing water proceeds up the bay, fresh water runoff from the surrounding ice fields and watersheds dilute the salinity and increase the sediment load in the path of the Homer instruments. The in-flowing water, in the path of the Seldovia instruments, initially supports a marine system, while the northern out-flowing water of the Homer instruments is more estuarine. The Kachemak Bay water quality instruments capture this difference with deployments along the north and south shores. These data will be used to supplement studies on primary productivity, larval distribution, settlement, recruitment, growth rates, community dynamics, and biodiversity in the bay.
format Dataset
author Angela Doroff
author_facet Angela Doroff
author_sort Angela Doroff
title Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)
title_short Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)
title_full Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)
title_fullStr Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)
title_full_unstemmed Long-term Monitoring of Water Quality in Cook Inlet/Kachemak Bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)
title_sort long-term monitoring of water quality in cook inlet/kachemak bay to understand recovery and restoration of injured near-shore species (2001-2013)
publisher Gulf of Alaska Data Portal
publishDate
url https://search.dataone.org/view/df35b.44.10
op_coverage Kachemak Bay, Cook Inlet
ENVELOPE(-151.89612,-151.1094,59.70567,59.37053)
BEGINDATE: 2001-07-12T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-06-21T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-37.967,-37.967,-54.017,-54.017)
ENVELOPE(-151.89612,-151.1094,59.70567,59.37053)
geographic Gulf of Alaska
Inner Bay
geographic_facet Gulf of Alaska
Inner Bay
genre Kachemak
Alaska
genre_facet Kachemak
Alaska
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