Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf
The eastern Bering Sea shelf supports productive marine ecosystems with extraordinarily valuable fisheries and subsistence resources, but sub-arctic seas are predicted to be one of the regions most sensitive to future warming of the world's oceans. Some of the most direct effects of changing cl...
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dataone:doi:10.5065/D65B00FR 2024-11-03T19:45:00+00:00 Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf Jeffrey M. Napp No geographic description provided. ENVELOPE(-179.4392,-163.9237,62.8528,54.2438) BEGINDATE: 2007-04-10T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2007-05-12T00:00:00Z 2016-04-02T06:39:43.515Z https://doi.org/10.5065/D65B00FR unknown Arctic Data Center CTD ocean cast Ship Oceanography Arctic biota oceans Dataset dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC https://doi.org/10.5065/D65B00FR 2024-11-03T19:08:09Z The eastern Bering Sea shelf supports productive marine ecosystems with extraordinarily valuable fisheries and subsistence resources, but sub-arctic seas are predicted to be one of the regions most sensitive to future warming of the world's oceans. Some of the most direct effects of changing climate will be on the extent, duration and timing of sea-ice over the Bering Sea shelf. Sea-ice controls the timing of the spring phytoplankton bloom, the fate of primary production, water column temperature and salinity, and provides a haul out and molting platform for marine mammals. Thus, the most urgent priority of the Bering Sea Ecosystem Study (BEST) is to examine the role of changing sea-ice conditions on the chemical, physical, and biological characteristics of the ecosystem. The first BEST cruise was scheduled on the US Coast Guard Cutter Healy in April-May 2007, however, physical observations, water column nutrient chemistry, and zooplankton distribution / abundance were not among the ecosystem components funded in the first call for proposals. Project ARC-0722448 funded by NSF after the first call for BEST proposals filled this gap in chlorophyll collections until the remainder of BEST projects could be assembled in 2008. Dataset Arctic Bering Sea Phytoplankton Sea ice Zooplankton Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Bering Sea ENVELOPE(-179.4392,-163.9237,62.8528,54.2438) |
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Open Polar |
collection |
Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) |
op_collection_id |
dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC |
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unknown |
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CTD ocean cast Ship Oceanography Arctic biota oceans |
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CTD ocean cast Ship Oceanography Arctic biota oceans Jeffrey M. Napp Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf |
topic_facet |
CTD ocean cast Ship Oceanography Arctic biota oceans |
description |
The eastern Bering Sea shelf supports productive marine ecosystems with extraordinarily valuable fisheries and subsistence resources, but sub-arctic seas are predicted to be one of the regions most sensitive to future warming of the world's oceans. Some of the most direct effects of changing climate will be on the extent, duration and timing of sea-ice over the Bering Sea shelf. Sea-ice controls the timing of the spring phytoplankton bloom, the fate of primary production, water column temperature and salinity, and provides a haul out and molting platform for marine mammals. Thus, the most urgent priority of the Bering Sea Ecosystem Study (BEST) is to examine the role of changing sea-ice conditions on the chemical, physical, and biological characteristics of the ecosystem. The first BEST cruise was scheduled on the US Coast Guard Cutter Healy in April-May 2007, however, physical observations, water column nutrient chemistry, and zooplankton distribution / abundance were not among the ecosystem components funded in the first call for proposals. Project ARC-0722448 funded by NSF after the first call for BEST proposals filled this gap in chlorophyll collections until the remainder of BEST projects could be assembled in 2008. |
format |
Dataset |
author |
Jeffrey M. Napp |
author_facet |
Jeffrey M. Napp |
author_sort |
Jeffrey M. Napp |
title |
Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf |
title_short |
Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf |
title_full |
Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf |
title_fullStr |
Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf |
title_full_unstemmed |
Spring Chlorophyll Concentrations on the Eastern Bering Sea Shelf |
title_sort |
spring chlorophyll concentrations on the eastern bering sea shelf |
publisher |
Arctic Data Center |
publishDate |
|
url |
https://doi.org/10.5065/D65B00FR |
op_coverage |
No geographic description provided. ENVELOPE(-179.4392,-163.9237,62.8528,54.2438) BEGINDATE: 2007-04-10T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2007-05-12T00:00:00Z |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-179.4392,-163.9237,62.8528,54.2438) |
geographic |
Arctic Bering Sea |
geographic_facet |
Arctic Bering Sea |
genre |
Arctic Bering Sea Phytoplankton Sea ice Zooplankton |
genre_facet |
Arctic Bering Sea Phytoplankton Sea ice Zooplankton |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.5065/D65B00FR |
_version_ |
1814733537746616320 |