Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project)

<p><strong>Gulf of Alaska Bongo catch data</strong></p> <p>Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska during 2004.</p> <p><a href=\"http://www.ims.uaf.edu/GLOBEC/\" target=\"blank\">Marine Ecosystem Monitoring in t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Edward D. Cokelet, Kenneth O. Coyle, Seth L. Danielson, Edward V. Farley
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:1dffd564512fad0dfbe2ad19c11bbeae55e7902f651a3f1d4cc43c7feadb4376
id dataone:sha256:1dffd564512fad0dfbe2ad19c11bbeae55e7902f651a3f1d4cc43c7feadb4376
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:BCODMO
language unknown
topic biota, oceans
spellingShingle biota, oceans
Edward D. Cokelet
Kenneth O. Coyle
Seth L. Danielson
Edward V. Farley
Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project)
topic_facet biota, oceans
description <p><strong>Gulf of Alaska Bongo catch data</strong></p> <p>Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska during 2004.</p> <p><a href=\"http://www.ims.uaf.edu/GLOBEC/\" target=\"blank\">Marine Ecosystem Monitoring in the Northern Gulf of Alaska </a>web site</p> <p><a href=\"http://www.ims.uaf.edu/gak1/\" target=\"blank\">GAK1 Time Series</a> web site</p> <p>This project is to conduct the Gulf of Alaska Long-Term Observation Program (GOA-LTOP) as part of Phase II of the Northeast Pacific (NEP) GLOBEC program. The GOA shelf supports a rich ecosystem that includes many commercially important fisheries. The basis for this productivity is enigmatic for the GOA shelf is deep, forced by downwelling-favorable winds, and fed by a massive nutrient-poor coastal freshwater discharge. Both the winds and the freshwater discharge are intimately linked to the strength and position of the Aleutian Low. The GOA ecosystem experiences substantial physical and biological changes on decadal and interannual time scales. Although some of these changes are correlated with various climatic indices a mechanistic understanding of climate change and ecosystem response is unavailable. The generic goal of this LTOP is to understand and quantify temporal (seasonal and interannual) and spatial (cross- and along-shelf) variations in the thermohaline, chemical, and biological properties and relationships of this shelf. Our proposal supports GLOBEC goals that will help: 1) retrospective studies interpret historical data, 2) design a cost-effective long-term monitoring program, 3) provide the seasonal and interannual context for concurrent mesoscale and process studies, and 4) provide boundary conditions and data sets for model evaluation. This 5-year project entails 4 field years and a fifth year for data analyses and synthesis. The field effort involves seven, 9-day interdisciplinary cruises/year in the northern GOA. The study area encompasses the 220-km long, Seward Line (sampled in the 1970s) that extends across the shelf and slope and high resolution sampling of the Alaska Coastal Current (ACC), upstream, downstream, and within Prince William Sound. The ACC is an important shelf habitat for yoy salmon migrating from nursery areas in the sound and into the GOA. The sampling effort (Table A) is year-round and motivated by seasonally significant physical and biological events affecting yoy pink salmon.</p> <p><strong><em>Table A. Sampling schedule and rationale for GOA-LTOP. (Key for Winds, Discharge and Stratification: S=strong; M=moderate; W=weak; D=downwelling winds; U=upwelling winds; V=variable; L=low; H=high) Deep water moves onshore during the July-August upwelling period.</em></strong></p> <table border=\"1\"> <tbody> <tr> <th colspan=\"1\" rowspan=\"2\">Month</th> <th colspan=\"4\" rowspan=\"1\">Sampling</th> <th colspan=\"3\" rowspan=\"1\">Physical Rationale</th> <th colspan=\"1\" rowspan=\"2\">Biological Rationale</th> </tr> <tr> <td>CTD</td> <td>Nutrients</td> <td>Zoo</td> <td>Fish</td> <td>Winds</td> <td>Disch</td> <td>Strat</td> </tr> <tr> <td>March</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D S</td> <td>L</td> <td>W</td> <td>Zooplankton migrate from depth (at shelfbreak); transported inshore.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>April</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D M</td> <td>L-M</td> <td>W V</td> <td>Phytoplankton bloom</td> </tr> <tr> <td>May</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D M-W</td> <td>M</td> <td>M V</td> <td>Maximum oceanic copepod biomass.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>July</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>D/U W</td> <td>M-H</td> <td>S</td> <td>Maximum zooplankton abundance; YOY salmon enter shelf.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>August</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>D/U W</td> <td>M-H</td> <td>S</td> <td>Maximum YOY salmon abundance on shelf.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>October</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>D S</td> <td>H</td> <td>H</td> <td>YOY salmon on shelf.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>December</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D S</td> <td>M</td> <td>M</td> <td>Fall-winter pre-conditioning for spring nutrients, small zooplankton.</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The sampling protocol follows GLOBEC guidelines and uses gear types and techniques similar to those in the Oregon LTOP that is also a part of the NEP-GLOBEC program. Most of the research will be conducted from the R/V <em>Alpha Helix</em>. Fish sampling will be done from a chartered trawler in July, August, and October. Both vessels will work together during these cruises so that the fishing charter can verify fish targets detected on the acoustics array towed from the <em>Alpha Helix</em>.</p> <p><em>This page was last updated on September 22, 2000.<br /> <br /> Maintained by:<br /> <a href=\"mailto:hbatchelder@coas.oregonstate.edu\">Hal Batchelder [hbatchelder@coas.oregonstate.edu</a><br /> College of Oceanic &amp; Atmospheric Sciences<br /> Oregon State University<br /> Corvallis, OR 97331-5503<br /> phone: 541-737-4500; FAX 541-737-2064 </em></p>
format Dataset
author Edward D. Cokelet
Kenneth O. Coyle
Seth L. Danielson
Edward V. Farley
author_facet Edward D. Cokelet
Kenneth O. Coyle
Seth L. Danielson
Edward V. Farley
author_sort Edward D. Cokelet
title Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project)
title_short Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project)
title_full Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project)
title_fullStr Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project)
title_full_unstemmed Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project)
title_sort zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the gulf of alaska from f/v great pacific gp0401-01, gp0401-02 from october to november 2004 (nep project)
publisher Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO)
publishDate 2009
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:1dffd564512fad0dfbe2ad19c11bbeae55e7902f651a3f1d4cc43c7feadb4376
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-157.4333,-151.6233,58.9217,54.29)
BEGINDATE: 2004-10-19T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2004-11-18T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-157.4333,-151.6233,58.9217,54.29)
geographic Gulf of Alaska
Pacific
geographic_facet Gulf of Alaska
Pacific
genre aleutian low
Pink salmon
Alaska
genre_facet aleutian low
Pink salmon
Alaska
_version_ 1811921015126622208
spelling dataone:sha256:1dffd564512fad0dfbe2ad19c11bbeae55e7902f651a3f1d4cc43c7feadb4376 2024-10-03T18:45:34+00:00 Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska from F/V Great Pacific GP0401-01, GP0401-02 from October to November 2004 (NEP project) Edward D. Cokelet Kenneth O. Coyle Seth L. Danielson Edward V. Farley ENVELOPE(-157.4333,-151.6233,58.9217,54.29) BEGINDATE: 2004-10-19T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2004-11-18T00:00:00Z 2009-02-20T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:1dffd564512fad0dfbe2ad19c11bbeae55e7902f651a3f1d4cc43c7feadb4376 unknown Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) biota, oceans Dataset 2009 dataone:urn:node:BCODMO 2024-10-03T18:19:41Z <p><strong>Gulf of Alaska Bongo catch data</strong></p> <p>Zooplankton counts for bongo net hauls in the Gulf of Alaska during 2004.</p> <p><a href=\"http://www.ims.uaf.edu/GLOBEC/\" target=\"blank\">Marine Ecosystem Monitoring in the Northern Gulf of Alaska </a>web site</p> <p><a href=\"http://www.ims.uaf.edu/gak1/\" target=\"blank\">GAK1 Time Series</a> web site</p> <p>This project is to conduct the Gulf of Alaska Long-Term Observation Program (GOA-LTOP) as part of Phase II of the Northeast Pacific (NEP) GLOBEC program. The GOA shelf supports a rich ecosystem that includes many commercially important fisheries. The basis for this productivity is enigmatic for the GOA shelf is deep, forced by downwelling-favorable winds, and fed by a massive nutrient-poor coastal freshwater discharge. Both the winds and the freshwater discharge are intimately linked to the strength and position of the Aleutian Low. The GOA ecosystem experiences substantial physical and biological changes on decadal and interannual time scales. Although some of these changes are correlated with various climatic indices a mechanistic understanding of climate change and ecosystem response is unavailable. The generic goal of this LTOP is to understand and quantify temporal (seasonal and interannual) and spatial (cross- and along-shelf) variations in the thermohaline, chemical, and biological properties and relationships of this shelf. Our proposal supports GLOBEC goals that will help: 1) retrospective studies interpret historical data, 2) design a cost-effective long-term monitoring program, 3) provide the seasonal and interannual context for concurrent mesoscale and process studies, and 4) provide boundary conditions and data sets for model evaluation. This 5-year project entails 4 field years and a fifth year for data analyses and synthesis. The field effort involves seven, 9-day interdisciplinary cruises/year in the northern GOA. The study area encompasses the 220-km long, Seward Line (sampled in the 1970s) that extends across the shelf and slope and high resolution sampling of the Alaska Coastal Current (ACC), upstream, downstream, and within Prince William Sound. The ACC is an important shelf habitat for yoy salmon migrating from nursery areas in the sound and into the GOA. The sampling effort (Table A) is year-round and motivated by seasonally significant physical and biological events affecting yoy pink salmon.</p> <p><strong><em>Table A. Sampling schedule and rationale for GOA-LTOP. (Key for Winds, Discharge and Stratification: S=strong; M=moderate; W=weak; D=downwelling winds; U=upwelling winds; V=variable; L=low; H=high) Deep water moves onshore during the July-August upwelling period.</em></strong></p> <table border=\"1\"> <tbody> <tr> <th colspan=\"1\" rowspan=\"2\">Month</th> <th colspan=\"4\" rowspan=\"1\">Sampling</th> <th colspan=\"3\" rowspan=\"1\">Physical Rationale</th> <th colspan=\"1\" rowspan=\"2\">Biological Rationale</th> </tr> <tr> <td>CTD</td> <td>Nutrients</td> <td>Zoo</td> <td>Fish</td> <td>Winds</td> <td>Disch</td> <td>Strat</td> </tr> <tr> <td>March</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D S</td> <td>L</td> <td>W</td> <td>Zooplankton migrate from depth (at shelfbreak); transported inshore.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>April</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D M</td> <td>L-M</td> <td>W V</td> <td>Phytoplankton bloom</td> </tr> <tr> <td>May</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D M-W</td> <td>M</td> <td>M V</td> <td>Maximum oceanic copepod biomass.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>July</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>D/U W</td> <td>M-H</td> <td>S</td> <td>Maximum zooplankton abundance; YOY salmon enter shelf.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>August</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>D/U W</td> <td>M-H</td> <td>S</td> <td>Maximum YOY salmon abundance on shelf.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>October</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>D S</td> <td>H</td> <td>H</td> <td>YOY salmon on shelf.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>December</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>X</td> <td>&nbsp;</td> <td>D S</td> <td>M</td> <td>M</td> <td>Fall-winter pre-conditioning for spring nutrients, small zooplankton.</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The sampling protocol follows GLOBEC guidelines and uses gear types and techniques similar to those in the Oregon LTOP that is also a part of the NEP-GLOBEC program. Most of the research will be conducted from the R/V <em>Alpha Helix</em>. Fish sampling will be done from a chartered trawler in July, August, and October. Both vessels will work together during these cruises so that the fishing charter can verify fish targets detected on the acoustics array towed from the <em>Alpha Helix</em>.</p> <p><em>This page was last updated on September 22, 2000.<br /> <br /> Maintained by:<br /> <a href=\"mailto:hbatchelder@coas.oregonstate.edu\">Hal Batchelder [hbatchelder@coas.oregonstate.edu</a><br /> College of Oceanic &amp; Atmospheric Sciences<br /> Oregon State University<br /> Corvallis, OR 97331-5503<br /> phone: 541-737-4500; FAX 541-737-2064 </em></p> Dataset aleutian low Pink salmon Alaska Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) (via DataONE) Gulf of Alaska Pacific ENVELOPE(-157.4333,-151.6233,58.9217,54.29)