From SCIENCEnet on Southern Ocean GLOBEC
cruises
From:
"Edwards, Michelle R."
Subj: NSF Ships
Will Probe Biological Enigmas
Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2001 16:31:56 -0400
NSF SHIPS TO PROBE BIOLOGICAL ENIGMAS OF THE FROZEN SOUTHERN OCEAN
Trillions of small, shrimp-like animals called krill form the base of
a food chain that supports untold numbers of penguins, seals and whales
in the biologically productive waters off Antarctica. But how Antarctic
krill survive the long, cold, pitch-dark austral winter and what role
algae that thrive on ice play in their survival are among many mysteries
of life in the Southern Ocean.
In late April, two ice breaking research ships operated by the National
Science Foundation (NSF) will sail from Chile for the Antarctic Peninsula
as part of a precedent-setting international oceanographic survey to try
to answer those and many other questions, including how larger predators
like seals and whales survive the severe polar winter.
"What happens in the winter determines how productive the ecosystem is,"
said Eileen Hofmann of Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., one of
several U.S. researchers who will take part in the international Southern
Ocean Global Ecosystems Dynamics (SO GLOBEC) survey. "How well the krill
do during the winter sets their spawning capacity for the summer."
The science teams will sail aboard the U.S. Antarctic Program vessels
Laurence M. Gould and Nathaniel B. Palmer as part of a multinational effort
that also will include research cruises by vessels from Germany, the United
Kingdom, and Korea. SO GLOBEC is part of the wider U.S. GLOBEC program
which studies how climate changes affect marine life.
Although conducting shipboard science in the austral winter is not unprecedented,
the scale and technological sophistication of the SO GLOBEC cruise, as
well as the cooperative aspects of the undertaking, make the venture unique,
according to researchers. Hofmann noted, for example, that SO GLOBEC will
for the first time include observers from the International Whaling Commission
(IWC).
The Palmer and the Gould will work in company to obtain a depth and breadth
of data that neither ship working singly could. The Palmer will carry
out a geographically widespread survey of the western side of the Antarctic
Peninsula centered on Marguerite Bay and thought to be one of the region's
most important krill wintering sites. The Gould will simultaneously conduct
detailed examinations of the water-column on the continental shelf and
in the bay from a series of fixed locations.
"The Palmer will map the distribution of krill, phytoplankton, seabirds,
mammals, whales and seals," explained Peter Wiebe, of the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution in Woods Hole, Mass. "The Gould will investigate biological
processes associated with these plants and animals." The ships are expected
to return in June.
SO GLOBEC researchers have tagged penguins and seals so that they can
be tracked by satellite, allowing scientist to refine their search areas.
The harsh conditions of the Southern Ocean at this time of year will test
to the maximum the technological advantages the scientists enjoy, Wiebe
noted. "Just the reality of learning how to carry out research aboard
these vessels in ice-covered waters is going to be a tremendous challenge,"
he said.
Wiebe said that new technologies to be deployed on the cruise are expected
to return a wealth of data previously unattainable. Although high-frequency
acoustics is a standard tool to map the
distribution of krill, no other existing system has the capability of
the Bio-Optical Multi-frequency Acoustical and Physical Environmental
Recorder (BIOMAPER- II), a device that the SO GLOBEC researchers will
employ. The fiber-optic-based technology will allow the researchers to
map the ocean to a depth of 500 meters (1642 feet).
"We can actually see simultaneously up and down," Wiebe said. "This capability
is going to give a far deeper reach into the water column. We going to
be able see and actually quantitatively assess the abundance of krill
at substantial depths."
__________________________________________
Med vennlig hilsen/Best regards from
- Roger B. Hanson, Executive Director
- JGOFS International Project Office
- Center for Studies of Environment and Resources
- University of Bergen
- Bergen High-Technology Center
- 5020 Bergen
- NORWAY
-