Weekly Ocean News
DATASTREME OCEAN WEEK NINE: 26-30 March 2012
ITEMS
OF INTEREST
- Tsunami Awareness Week -- NOAA and the National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program (a partnership between NOAA, the United States Geological Survey, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the National Science Foundation, and the 28 U.S. Coastal States, Territories, and Commonwealths) have designated this upcoming week (25-31 March 2012) as National Tsunami
Awareness Week. Tsunami awareness training exercises will be conducted
for the states and territories along the Pacific that is called Pacific Tsunami Exercise (PACIFEX
12) and for Florida, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands called 2012 Atlantic Tsunami Exercise (LANTEX12).
Open houses will be held at the National Weather Service's tsunami
warning centers in Alaska and Hawaii, along with various community
activities in coastal states. The Governor of Alaska has proclaimed
this coming week as Tsunami Awareness Week in Alaska. This week
coincides with the 48th anniversary of the series of devastating
tsunamis that struck southeastern Alaska following several earthquakes.
[Governor's
Office for State of Alaska]
- New features added to NASA's "Eyes on the Earth" visualization -- An improved version of NASA's "Eyes on the Earth" interactive virtual reality visualization that has several new features including a simplified interface. The visualization delivers data from NASA's fleet of Earth satellite that permit the images to be viewed on home computers. Event time lines and recent updates to global sea level height and surface temperature datasets are now available on "Eyes on the Earth 2.0." [NASA JPL]
In addition, a new free iPhone app called "Earth Now" is available from NASA that provides visualizations of near-real-time global climate data from NASA's Earth science satellite fleet. [NASA Global Climate Change]
Ocean in the News:
- Eye on the tropics --- No organized tropical cyclones were detected across any of the planet's ocean basins last week.
- Modification to popular hurricane scale announced -- NOAA's National Weather Service recently announced that minor modifications to the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale will be made in mid-May 2012 that will adjust the threshold wind speeds for several of the hurricane categories so as to help resolved issues associated with wind speed unit conversions. These adjustments will be made only to thresholds for category 3, 4 and 5 hurricanes. [NASA Hurricane Page] See also [NOAA's National Hurricane Center ]
- Sea Grant studies to investigate models for sustaining West Coast fishing industry -- During the last week NOAA officials announced that two new National Sea Grant College Program studies supported by their agency will assess how new business models for community supported fisheries could benefit fishing communities in Washington, Oregon, and California. [NOAA News]
- Coldest Antarctic Bottom Water layer thinning during last several decades -- Oceanographers from NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory and the University of Washington report that their analysis of oceanographic survey data collected between 1980 and 2011 indicates the layer of Antarctic Bottom Water residing along the ocean floor surrounding the Antarctic continent has been thinning, which translates into the reduction in this cold water mass at an average rate of about eight million metric tons per second over the past few decades. The researchers are not certain if the reduction is cyclic or part of a longer term trend associated with global climate change. However, the Antarctic Bottom Water and associated ocean currents play a role in the transport of heat and carbon around the ocean basins, which help regulate the planetary climate. [NOAA News]
- New map designed to track underwater robotic vehicles and display marine data --The U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS®) recently launched a new online map that provides users with a "snapshot" of the current positions of underwater robotic vehicles or gliders for all IOOS regions and their partners. In addition, users can data from the historical collection of data from previous missions, extending back to 2005. [NOAA's National Ocean Service]
- Visualization tool expanded across Arctic region to explore sea ice --NOAA and its partners (US Coast Guard, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the US Department of Interior and the University of New Hampshire) are expanding the Environmental Response Management Application (ERMA®) online mapping and visualization tool to include a spatial interface designed to explore sea ice concentrations in the Arctic region so as to allow responders to prepare for potential oil spills and the effects associated with changing climate. [NOAA's National Ocean Service]
- New York State's offshore energy planning supported by NOAA science study -- A study entitled "A Biogeographic Assessment of Seabirds, Deep Sea Corals and Ocean Habitats of the New York Bight" prepared by New York Department of State's Ocean and Great Lakes Program and NOAA's National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science was recently released that is designed to help New York state officials make advances in managing the Empire State's coastal waters and in guiding future development of offshore wind energy projects. [NOAA News]
- Some Gulf dolphins found to be severely ill -- Preliminary results from comprehensive physical examinations of 32 live bottlenose dolphins made by NOAA marine mammal biologists and their research partners during the summer of 2011 indicate that these dolphins who reside in Barataria Bay, Louisiana are showing signs of severe ill health, according to NOAA marine mammal biologists and their local, state, federal and other research partners. Sections of this bay where these dolphins reside remain closed because of the existence of oil from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. [NOAA Gulf Spill Restoration]
- Oil confirmed to have entered Gulf food chain from Deepwater Horizon disaster --Citing the evidence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in zooplankton from the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, scientists from East Carolina University and their colleagues have recently confirmed that crude oil has entered into the Gulf's food chain following the April 2010 explosion BP Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. The researchers claim that the oil may still be entering the food web even though the well has been capped. [University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science]
- International effort conducts study of ocean value -- An international team of scientists and economists coordinated by the Stockholm Environment Institute are conducting a major study that is attempting to measure the global ocean's monetary value and to tally those costs and savings associated with human decisions affecting the ocean's health. A professor from the Virginia Institute of Marine Science who is coauthor of the study's report entitled "Valuing the Ocean" warns that multiple threats to ocean health exist that include acidification, low-oxygen "dead zones," overfishing, pollution, sea-level rise, and warming. [Virginia Institute of Marine Science]
- UK global temperature data set updated -- Early last week the United Kingdom Meteorological Office announced that the global temperature data set (HadCRUT4 ) complied by their Office and the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit had been updated and is more comprehensive than previous versions, containing surface temperature observations on both land and sea going back to 1850. Some of the additional data were obtained from 400 more stations in the polar regions of the Northern Hemisphere. These data will be used to study long-term changes in global temperature. [UK Met Office]
- An All-Hazards Monitor -- This Web portal provides the user information from NOAA on
current environmental events that may pose as hazards such as tropical
weather, drought, floods, marine weather, tsunamis, rip currents,
Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) and coral bleaching. [NOAAWatch]
- Global
and US Hazards/Climate Extremes --
A review and analysis of the global impacts of various
weather-related events, to include drought, floods and storms during
the current month. [NCDC]
- Earthweek -- Diary of the Planet [earthweek.com] Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Concept of the Week: Controlling Nutrient
Input into Chesapeake Bay
Chesapeake Bay is the nation's largest estuary; it is more
than 300 km (185 mi) long, 65 km (40 mi) at its broadest, and averages
about 20 m (66 ft) deep. The estuary was formed by the post-glacial
rise in sea level that flooded the valley of the ancient Susquehanna
River. The Bay receives about half its water from the Atlantic Ocean
and the other half from the more than 150 rivers and streams draining a
166,000 square kilometer land area encompassing parts of New York,
Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and the
District of Columbia. Major rivers that empty into Chesapeake Bay
include the Potomac, Susquehanna, York, and James.
As described in more detail on pages 227-229 of your DataStreme
Ocean textbook, an estuary is a complex and highly
productive ecosystem where seawater and freshwater runoff meet and mix
to some degree. In Chesapeake Bay, more-dense seawater creeps northward
along the bottom of the estuary, moving under the less-dense fresh
water flowing in the opposite direction. This circulation combined with
wind-driven and tidal water motions causes salinity to decrease
upstream in the Bay, from values typical of the open ocean at its mouth
to freshwater values at its northern margin.
As in all ecosystems, organisms living in estuaries depend on
one another and their physical environment for food energy and habitat.
Phytoplankton and submerged aquatic vegetation (e.g., marsh grass) are
the primary producers (autotrophs) in estuarine food chains. Chesapeake
Bay consumers (heterotrophs) include zooplankton, finfish, shellfish,
birds, and humans.
Human activity has greatly modified Chesapeake Bay with
consequences for the functioning of the ecosystem. Much of the original
forests that covered its drainage basin were cleared and converted to
farmland, roads, cities, and suburban developments. These modifications
accelerated the influx of nutrients (i.e., compounds of phosphorus and
nitrogen), sediment, pesticides, and other pollutants into the Bay.
More nutrients spur growth of algal populations and when these
organisms die (in mid-summer), their remains sink to the bottom.
Decomposition of their remains reduces dissolved oxygen levels in the
Chesapeake's bottom water. More sediment increases the turbidity of the
water, reducing sunlight penetration for photosynthesis. Presently
Chesapeake Bay is on the Federal list of "impaired waters" and in need
of pollution abatement and remediation. States in the drainage basin
have agreed to work together to clean up the Bay but there are
significant obstacles including cost.
One casualty of human modification of the Chesapeake Bay
ecosystem was marsh grass-reduced by 90% from historical levels. Marsh
grass anchors sediment and dampens wave action thereby controlling
shoreline erosion and turbidity. Marsh grass is a food source for many
organisms including waterfowl and small mammals and serves as a primary
nursery for crabs and many species of fish. Reduction of this habitat
along with over-fishing has been implicated in the decline of
populations of blue crabs, a mainstay of the Bay fishery for more than
a century. Over the past decade, the number of adult female blue crabs
plunged by 80%. Without adequate protection by marsh grass, blue crabs
are more vulnerable to predation by striped bass (i.e., rockfish).
Striped bass turned to blue crabs as a food source when fishing reduced
the numbers of menhaden, their preferred food. Menhaden is a marine
fish in the herring family and the Bay's top fishery by weight.
Human modification of the Chesapeake Bay drainage basin
converted it from an essentially closed system to
an open system. In the original climax forests,
nutrients primarily cycled within the system with relatively little
input to the Bay. Modification of the land for agriculture increased
the area of the soil exposed to the elements and runoff from rain and
snowmelt accelerated nutrient input into the Bay. In addition to such
non-point (area) sources of nutrients are point sources including the
effluent of wastewater treatment plants that discharge treated water
into rivers and streams that drain into the Bay.
For decades, agriculture has successfully employed various
cultivation practices that limit the runoff from cropland (e.g.,
contour plowing, strip cropping, and retention ponds.) However, less
than one-third of the 300-wastewater treatment facilities located in
the Chesapeake Bay drainage basin have the technology to remove high
levels of nutrients from their effluent. Under current environmental
regulations, states are not required to regulate the nutrient content
of this discharge. But in late October 2003, the Chesapeake Bay
Foundation, a private, not-for-profit environmental advocacy
organization called on Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and the
District of Columbia to specify nutrient limits on permits they grant
to all wastewater treatment facilities. In support of their
recommendations, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation cited the many water
quality problems stemming from excessive nutrient load in the Bay
waters (e.g., algal blooms, spread of "dead zones.") According to the
U. S. EPA, under the federal Clean Water Act, a state can control
nitrogen pollution if it determines that environmental harm is taking
place. However, the EPA estimates that as much as $4.4 billion would be
required to install state-of-the-art nutrient removal technologies at
all major plants (those treating more than 500,000 gallons of
wastewater per day).
Concept of the Week: Questions
- In terms of nutrient cycling, the climax forest that
originally occupied the Chesapeake Bay drainage basin was a(n) [(open)(closed)] system.
- Excessive input of nutrients into Chesapeake Bay [(spurs
the growth of)(has little impact
on)] algal populations and [(increases)(reduces)] the concentration of dissolved oxygen in bottom waters.
Historical Events:
- 26 March 1845...Joseph Francis of New York City patented a
corrugated sheet-iron lifeboat. (Today in Science History)
- 26 March 1946...The International Ice Patrol resumed after
being suspended during World War II. (US Coast Guard Historians Office)
- 26-28 March 2004…The first ever confirmed hurricane in the
South Atlantic Ocean, named Catarina, struck the coast of the Brazilian
states of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul with heavy rains and
winds, before dissipating over land late on the 28th. (The Weather
Doctor)
- 27 March 1513...Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon sighted
Florida (and the continent of North America) for the first time,
mistaking it for another island. (Wikipedia)
- 27 March 1827...At the age of 18, Charles Darwin submitted
his first report of an original scientific discovery to the Plinian
Society in Edinburgh, Scotland. Darwin had made several discoveries
about the biology of tiny marine organisms found along the Scottish
coast. (Today in Science History)
- 27 March 1899...The first international radio transmission
between England and France was achieved by the Italian inventor G.
Marconi.
- 27 March 1930...The first US radio broadcast was made from
a ship at sea.
- 27-28 March 1964...The most powerful earthquake in US
history, the Good Friday Earthquake, rocked south central Alaska,
killing 125 people and causing $311 million in property damage,
especially to the city of Anchorage. The earthquake in Prince William
Sound, which had a magnitude of 9.2 on the Richter scale, caused some
landmasses to be thrust upward locally as high as 80 feet, while
elsewhere land sank as much as 8 feet. This earthquake and submarine
landslides also created a tsunami that also produced extensive coastal
damage. A landslide at Valdez Inlet in Alaska generated a tsunami that
reached a height of 220 feet in the inlet. A major surge wave that was
approximately 100 ft above low tide caused major damage to Whittier
(where 13 died) and other coastal communities in Alaska. The first wave
took more than 5 hours to reach the Hawaiian Islands where a 10-foot
wave was detected, while a wave that was 14.8 feet above high tide
level traveled along portions of the West Coast, reaching northern
California 4 hours after the earthquake. Nearly 10,000 people jammed
beaches at San Francisco to view the possible tsunami, but no
high-amplitude waves hit those beaches. Tsunami damage reached Crescent
City in northern California. Tens of thousands of aftershocks indicated
that the region of faulting extended a distance of about 600 miles. The
Alaska Tsunami Warning Center was established because of this disaster,
with a mission to warn Alaskan communities of the threat from tsunamis.
[See the 1964
Prince William Sound Tsunami page from the University of
Washington.] (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar) (US Coast Guard
Historians Office)
- 27 March 1980...Waves to 20 feet and winds to 58 mph in the
North Sea southwest of Stavanger, Norway led to the collapse of an oil
rig accommodation platform. The deaths of 123 of the 212 people on the
platform were the world's worst drilling catastrophe. (Accord's Weather
Guide Calendar)
- 28 March 1848...USS Supply reached the
Bay of Acre, anchoring under Mount Carmel near the village of Haifa,
during expedition to explore the Dead Sea and the River Jordan. (Naval
Historical Center)
- 28 March 1910...Henri Fabre became the first person to fly
a seaplane after taking off from a water runway at Martigues near
Marseilles, France. (Wikipedia)
- 29-31 March 1848...An ice dam at the neck of Lake Erie and
the entrance to the Niagara River between Fort Erie, ON and Buffalo, NY
caused by wind, waves and lake currents stopped flow of water over
Niagara Falls for 30 hours, commencing during the late hours of the 29th.
(Accord's Weather Guide Calendar) (The Weather Doctor)
- 29 March 1910...The world's largest oceanographic museum
was opened in Monaco through the generosity of Prince Albert I of
Monaco, a great oceanographer, statesman, and humanitarian. This
museum, a part of the Oceanographic Institute, has a grandiose facade
overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. (Today in Science History)
- 29 March 1914...The Canadian Pacific liner Empress
of Ireland, which had departed Quebec the previous day for
Liverpool, collided with the Norwegian collier Storstad in the fog along the St. Lawrence River, sinking with the loss of 1024
passengers and crew.
- 29 March 1985...The Nantucket I was
decommissioned, ending 164 years of lightship service. (USCG
Historian's Office)
- 30 March 1923...The Cunard liner Laconia arrived in New York City, becoming the first passenger ship to
circumnavigate the world, a cruise of 130 days. (Today in Science
History)
- 31 March 1932...The United States signed the Whaling
Convention at Geneva with 21 other countries. (USCG Historian's Office)
- 31 March 1995...Coast Guard Communication Area Master
Station Atlantic sent a final message by Morse code and then signed
off, officially ending more than 100 years of telegraph communications.
(USCG Historian's Office)
- 31 March 2000...The water temperature of Lake Erie at
Buffalo, NY was 39 degrees Fahrenheit on the last day of March, tying
the maximum temperature for the date with that of 1998. Ice was present
in 61 of 74 years on the 31st, but this was
third year in a row with open water. (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar)
- 1 April 1873...The British White Star steamship Atlantic sank off Nova Scotia killing 547 after striking an
underwater rock near Meagher's Island while on a voyage from Liverpool,
England to New York City. Only 413 people survived. (Wikipedia)
- 1 April 1946...The Scotch Cap Lighthouse on Unimak Island
in Alaska's Aleutian Islands was shaken by two earthquakes in a 27
minute span, then obliterated by a tsunami wave. The entire five-man
crew was killed and the lighthouse antenna (105 ft above sea level) was
washed away. Some debris was found 115 ft above sea level. The tsunami
that propagated across the Pacific Ocean was responsible for more than
165 fatalities and over $26 million in damage. Many of the casualties
were on the Hawaiian Islands, especially in Hilo on the Big Island.
This tsunami was responsible for the development of the current Pacific
Tsunami Warning System. (University
of Washington) (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar) (US Coast
Guard Historian's Office)
Return to DataStreme
Ocean Website
Prepared by AMS DS Ocean Central Staff and Edward J. Hopkins,
Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2012, The American Meteorological Society.