Ocean nutrient and chemistry data collected using the SuperSucker from the Chuchki Sea, 2016-2017

Satellite measurements have documented significant reductions in sea ice cover, thickness, and duration throughout the Arctic Ocean in recent decades. Because of the complex interactions and feedbacks among physical, biogeochemical and ecological processes in the Arctic, there is significant uncerta...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burke Hales
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A28S4JP6K
Description
Summary:Satellite measurements have documented significant reductions in sea ice cover, thickness, and duration throughout the Arctic Ocean in recent decades. Because of the complex interactions and feedbacks among physical, biogeochemical and ecological processes in the Arctic, there is significant uncertainty regarding how these changes in sea ice will impact the marine biological pump, which fuels the rich bottom communities on Arctic ocean shelves and is key to the regional carbon cycle. While responses of the biological pump to increased light availability in spring are currently being pursued, a considerable gap in knowledge exists regarding biological processes in the late summer and early fall. Recent studies indicate a several-decade trend of intensifying wind forcing over the Alaskan margin along the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas in the late, ice-free season (September-November). These events could lead to mixing of nutrients into surface waters, fueling increased biological production and sequestering additional carbon into shelf bottom waters prior to the winter ice advance. However, the lack of direct, concurrent observations of primary and net community productivity rates, and nutrient and carbon distributions during this poorly-sampled time of year hinders efforts to assess the ecosystem implications of such changes. The goal of this project was to address the question of increasing biological production in the late season through intensive field sampling in two successive years. The data archived here were collected during two research cruises on the Research Vessel Sikuliaq (SKQ201612S and SKQ201712S) in September 2016 and August 2017. These data contain measurements of ocean nutrient and chemistry data from the Chukchi Sea. Data were collected using a towed SuperSucker system and analyzed in near-real time.