Title: A Cabled Observatory in Barrow, Alaska
1 A Cabled Observatory in Barrow, Alaska in the
Context of SBI Results
Jackie M. Grebmeier
University of Tennessee Knoxville,
TN, USA Barrow, Alaska 8 February 2005
2The Western Arctic Shelf-Basin Interactions (SBI)
Project
Studies as part of the SBI global change project
are investigating the production, transformation
and fate of carbon at the shelf-slope interface
in the northern Chukchi and Beaufort Seas,
downstream of the productive shallow western
Arctic shelves, as a prelude to understanding the
impacts of a potential warming of the Arctic
http//sbi.utk.edu
courtesy Leif Anderson
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52003
1979
Sea ice extent in the Arctic-past, current, and
future
2010-2030
2040-2060
6- ICARP II WG5 Arctic Margins and Gateway
- Draft Science Plan-Feb. 2005 (Paris, France)
- a. Background
- Arctic change reduction sea ice extent and
thickness - freshwater balance, est. increase precipitation
and river runoff - timing biological production, est. earlier
- cascading effects to higher trophics, change
ecosystem dynamics - b. Strategic Area of Interest
- continental margins transformation zone between
shelf and deep basin regions and gateways for
inflow/outflow of Pacific and Atlantic waters and
freshwater (Bering, Fram, Canadian Archipelago,
St. Anna Trough) - boundary for cross shelf-basin exchange
- important ventilation deep basins via brine
transport with POC/DIC/DOC - upwelling warm, nutrient-rich Atlantic waters up
slope - margins area for boundary currents, large scale
ocean circulation transport heat, salt,
freshwater, biogeochemical properties and
sediments around arctic ocean - model past, present, future impacts Arctic
ecosystems and global connections
7Figure and caption courtesy Eddy Carmack,
IOS/Canada
- Pacific Inflow Shelf/Gateway/Margin Complex
- focus shelves northern Bering and Chukchi seas
- gateways Bering, plus Anadyr Shpanberg
straits - shelf-basin exchange (on- and off-shore)
- canyon connectivity to Arctic Basin Herald
Canyon, Barrow Canyon, Hanna Canyon - interactions with East Siberian sea and Beaufort
sea
8GATEWAYS
MARGINS
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6
4
7
3
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1
2
ICARP2 WG5 version, modified Feb. 2005 from E.
Carmack
9Proposed Barrow Cabled Observatory
10Red spring 2002 process cruise Magenta summer
2002 process cruise Green summer 2003 survey
cruise
Joint Office for Science Support (JOSS) Products
for SBI see http//www.joss.ucar.edu/sbi/catalog/
11Seasonal cycle in the Arctic Ocean
JUNE
JULY
MAY
APRIL
AUG
Snow
Snow
SEPT
Ice algae
Sea ice
Sea ice
Zooplankton
Phytoplankton bloom
Grazing
Vertical flux
Wassman et al. 2004
12Ice algae important in spring vs water column
production in summer
Possible ice algal carbon contributes 10-25 of
the particulate organic carbon pool over the
seasonally ice-covered Arctic shelves during the
spring bloom important food for arctic cod
courtesy Gay Sheffield
Ice algae slower rates of decay compared to
temperate diatoms allows more labile
material to fuel benthic production in shelf
regions
courtesy Rolf Gradinger
13Integrated chlorophyll (mg/l), compiled over the
period 1975-1996
Dunton et al. in revision
14modified from L. Codispoti
15High sediment load in the ice, enough to affect
the melting of the ice as well as primary
production in the ice layers and the water
underneath. Very rough numbers (on the order of
10 million tons of terrigenous sediment entrained
in 2001/02) it appears that at least in some
years this can be quite significant.
Eicken
16Chukchi/Beaufort Slope waters Sediment,
chlorophyll, and nutrient-enriched Chukchi shelf
winter water
courtesy Tom Weingartner 2003
17BC
EHS
EHS
BC
Ammonium and silicate sections from East Hanna
Shoal (EHS) And Barrow Canyon (BC) in summer 2002
Codispoti et al.-SBI Hydro Team
18MODEL RESULTS
Phosphate (µM)
Nutrientrich waters lie off the shelf break
The continued retreat of the summer ice cover
exposes more and more of the shelf- break for
longer and longer periods of time to upwelling
favorable winds
From Carmack Chapman, GRL, 2003
19Sea surface temperature-SBI Study area, 23 August
2004
20East Barrow Line (HLY-04-03)
photo by Ev Sherr
Cooper et al.,Science, in prep
21Arctic, Subarctic and Bering Sea dominant
copepods All sketches drawn at same
magnification all scale bars represent 1mm
Arctic Ocean
Arctic Copepods Calanus hyperboreus C.
glacialis Metridia longa
Canada Basin
Chukchi Sea
Beaufort Sea
Shelf Copepods Pseudocalanus sp. Oithona sp.
Russia
Bering Sea Copepods Neocalanus cristatus
N. flemingeri Calanus marshallae
Alaska
Bering Sea Basin
courtesy Sharon Smith
22Vertical Section Along Barrow Canyon, Summer 2002
!?
- Intriguing elevation in particle concentration in
cold water near shelf-break - We need data at higher spatial resolution to
adequately describe this feature
courtesy C. Ashjian
23POC Export Flux 2002 Results
Spring
Summer
Moran et al. in press
24Circulation Superimposed on the Distribution of
Benthic Biomass 1970-1990
Dunton, Schonberg, Maidment, and Grebmeier ,
submitted DSR 2004
25Faunal Benthic Biomass-Color Symbols Amphipod
(pink), Bivalve (brown), Foraminifera (red), Sand
dollar (green), Polychaete (yellow), Other (blue).
26Sediment oxygen uptake (carbon supply) spring vs.
summer 2002
27- NSF Workshop Seafloor Cabled Observatory on the
Beaufort Shelf (Sue Moore,
NOAA/UW) - Integrated acoustic systems that include
navigation, communication and acoustical
oceanography - Since 1999, NOAA has deployed a series of
autonomous recorders offshore Alaska to (1)
detect the calls of endangered whales over
unprecedented spatial and temporal scales (2)
identify components of anthropogenic noise and
(3) record variability in ambient noise fields in
marine mammal habitats - Specifically, two recorders were successfully
deployed northeast of Barrow, as part of the
2003-04 NSF/Shelf Basin Interaction program, to
detect calls from bowhead whales (Balaena
mysticetus), walruses (Odobenus rosmarus),
bearded seals (Erignathus barbatus) and ringed
seals (Phoca hispida). - Each of these species is important to the
Alaskan Native community as sources of nutrition
and cultural heritage. When considered in
combination, these top predators can track how
on-going climate change is affecting the Arctic
ecosystem, a key objective of the Study of
Environmental Arctic Change (SEARCH) program. - Of note, the Study of the North Alaskan Coastal
System (SNACS), a NSF contribution to SEARCH,
includes research focused on oceanographic
variability in bowhead whale feeding habitats
northeast of Barrow (Ashjian, et al., 2004) and
it is hoped that acoustic capability can be
integrated to that program. - Our scientific interest lies in integrating
acoustic observing capability into the Seafloor
Cabled Observatory, planned as part of the Barrow
Global Climate Change Research Facility (BGCCRF).
In this way acoustic observations can be made in
real time for the community of Barrow and for the
broader science objectives related to
understanding the effects of climate change on
the Arctic ecosystem.
28- Scientific Objective for a Cabled Observatory
- Comparison of observations made in Pacific water
within the surface layer of Barrow Canyon (e.g.
temperature, salinity, nutrients, chlorophyll,
stable oxygen isotopes, particle load) with
coincident upstream measurements in the Bering
Strait - Mounting of instruments, such as microcats for
T/S, upward looking sonar for ice thickness, and
nutrient, chlorophyll and turbidity sensors - Time series comparisons would allow both
seasonal and annual estimation of carbon
transformation occurring over the northern Bering
and Chukchi shelves that are so intimately
connected to marine system further to the north
near Barrow and into the Arctic Basin - Additional sensor deployment in the Atlantic
water layer deeper in Barrow Canyon would track
these same measurements for compare/contrast
evaluation of changes in these physical and
biochemical tracers to evaluate status and trends
in the physical forcing and ecosystem health of
the region - SBI data indicate high levels of silicate and
ammonium effluxing from Chukchi shelf sediments,
which are entrained in the northward moving water
that form plumes of nutrients extending offshore
at the halocline depth into the Arctic basin -
29- Scientific Objective for a Cabled Observatory
(cont.) - Other measurements, e.g. dissolved organic
carbon measured indirectly via CDOM fluorescence
sensor technology, plankton recorders, benthic
video recorders, and acoustic devices mounted on
a cabled network to trace carbon cycle - Continuous, long-term, measurements of physical
and biogeochemical parameters using a cabled
observatory infrastructure could be extremely
valuable for tracking environmental change at
various time scales in the region.