Title: The Arctic Nearshore Environment:
1The Arctic Nearshore Environment A System
Defined by Complex Hydrological and
Biogeochemical Linkages and Feedbacks
Ken Dunton The University of Texas at
Texas Marine Science Institute
2- The nearshore zone of the Arctic Ocean has been
largely ignored, with a few exceptions (e.g.
Swedish Tundra Expeditions). In the U.S., little
research effort since the end of OCSEAP funded
studies over two decades ago. - The region represents a dynamic boundary between
arctic coastal plain watersheds and the arctic
shelf that is dominated by distinctive physical
processes that are unique to the Arctic.
3The nearshore zone is the site of
- Most human activity, especially subsistence
hunting - Increased coastal erosion
Bowhead, Pt. Barrow (from D. Schell)
Camden Bay, July 1991
4- Intense petroleum and industrial development,
both onshore and offshore
Prudhoe Bay
Tern Island, Stefannson Sound, early July
TAPS, south of Prudhoe Bay
5- Organic and inorganic input of materials from
river discharge - Substantial variations in seasonal ice-retreat
and freshwater inputs from rivers and coastal
runoff - Physical extremes of temperature, winds, and ice
cover
Ice break-up, near Cross Island, early July
6- Migrations of anadromous fishes, migratory water
fowl, and large animals.
Black Brant, Prudhoe Bay
S.R. Johnson, 2000
P.C. Craig, 1980
Caribou, Camden Bay
7- Consequently, the diversity and distribution of
nearshore marine and terrestrial organisms is
largely governed by the physical events that
regulate the intensity of biogeochemical and
hydrological cycling between marine and
terrestrial ecosystems.
Canning River, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
8The absence of recent studies on the arctic
nearshore zone is largely a result of
- Extremely variable and unpredictable physical and
climatic conditions - High costs of performing arctic field research
- The absence of logistical support and
infrastructure to support arctic coastal studies - Access to ice-strengthened and shallow draft
research vessels - Emphasis on shelf and basin research
9Overarching goal of an Arctic Nearshore Processes
Initiative
- To improve our understanding of the
biogeochemical and hydrological processes that
occur on the nearshore zone of the arctic shelf
and coastal plain with respect to changes in
global climate with a focus on - The lateral exchanges of carbon, nutrients,
water, and other materials at the nearshore
interface. - The physical processes that regulate these
exchanges on temporal and spatial scales.
10Lateral exchanges coastal erosion and river
inflow
- Sediment contribution from coastal erosion can
equal (Laptev Sea) or exceed riverine input by
sevenfold (Beaufort Sea, Alaska). - Rates of coastal erosion can vary considerably
(average 1-4 m yr-1) but rates up to 18 m yr-1
have been documented (Reimnitz et al., 1988). - Carbon content of transported sediments varies
from 1-6 (marsh sediments) to 15-30 (peat
lenses).
Camden Bay, 1991
11Productivity and Biogeochemical Cycling (carbon)
- Earlier studies demonstrated that peat carbon is
not utilized by marine consumers and does not
enter nearshore food webs. However, tremendous
amounts of carbon enters the nearshore coastal
zone from runoff and erosion. What is the fate of
this material?
Peat on Camden Bay shoreline
From D. Schell. unpub.
D..M. Schell et al, 1982
12Productivity and Biogeochemical Cycling (nitrogen)
- Nearshore sediments appear
- to constitute an important
- source of marine denitrification
- and loss of contained nitrogen
- for arctic waters.
- Does the decomposition of
- organic matter from coastal
- watersheds contribute a
- significant source of new
- nitrogen for nearshore primary
- producers, as reflected in late
- spring phytoplankton blooms?
Devol et al., 1997
13Productivity and Biogeochemical Cycling
- The temporal and spatial scales of primary
productivity along the nearshore arctic coast
appear to be related to hot spots of secondary
productivity, local hydrology, and
nearshore/shelf circulation.
D..M. Schell et al, 1982
14Time series of mean daily discharge
Time series for May-June 2000 of a) mean daily
discharge from the Sagavanirktok River, b) ice
thickness (solid line) and transmissivity (dashed
line). The oceanographic data are from
Stefansson Sound near Dinkham Sands.
T.J. Weingartner S.R. Okkonen, 2001
15Light attenuation on the nearshore shelf
Light attenuation across the nearshore region of
the Mackenzie shelf in September 1986.
E.C. Carmack et. al, 1989
16Biogeochemical linkages and feedbacks as a
function of climate change on the nearshore shelf
Vörösmarty et al., 2001 NSF-ARCSS Hydrology
Workshop Report
17Effects of Coastal Climate change on Nearshore
Circulation and Open Water
- Some of the factors known to have significant
impacts on nearshore processes, which are not
well understood, include
- Timing of the breakup of the nearshore fast ice
and the duration and magnitude of fresh water
discharge.
- Sediment transport by fast ice
J.C. Truett, 1980
Strudel scour formation during flooding of the
fast ice, north of Sag River Delta, Stefannson
Sound
Stefannson Sound
18Domains of the nearshore shelf can shift in
response to the magnitude and timing of
freshwater inflow events
R.W. MacDonald E.C. Carmack, 1991
B.J. Gallaway and R.G. Fechhelm, 2000
R.W. MacDonald et.al., 1987
19Seasonal variability in domains as reflected by
vertical salinity profiles
R.W. MacDonald E.C. Carmack, 1991
Sections of salinity on the sampling transect for
(a) 6-8 September 1986, (b) 1-5 April 1987, and
(d) 25 May 1987.
20- Nearshore circulation patterns in the Arctic are
poorly understood how do frequent changes in
wind direction and speed influence circulation
and the advection of nutrients into the nearshore
zone?
- Wind direction and speed are known to influence
the dispersion of fast ice, rates of primary
production, and the distribution of nekton.
J.C. Truett, 1980
Catch-per-unit effort of arctic cisco in the
Colville River as a function of average
east/west wind component (B.J. Gallaway and R.G.
Fechhelm, 2000).
21Climate change and environmental variability
- Configuration and changes in emergent land forms
(barrier islands) which alter the effects of wind
on biota, water, ice movement, and exchange
processes.
S.R. Johnson, 2000
22Climatic forcing of coastal change
Manson et al., 2001
23Summary
- The arctic nearshore is an ice dominated
transition zone characterized by the complex
exchange of water, nutrients, and organic matter
between marine and terrestrial ecosystems. -
- The lateral transfers of carbon and nutrients
appear to play an important role in regulating
the seasonal productivity of the nearshore zone,
but the processes that control these transfers
are poorly understood. - In arctic nearshore environments, the iterative
effect of climate change will produce a
synergistic outcome of accelerated coastal
erosion that will have measurable effects on
human society, as well as have significant
impacts on the structure and function of the
coastal ecosystem.