Weekly Ocean News
DATASTREME OCEAN WEEK NINE: 30 March-3 April 2015
ITEMS
OF INTEREST
- Interactive game unveiled to build and test climate knowledge -- The NOAA Climate.gov team recently unveiled Climate Challenge, a new educational interactive game designed to help players learn more about climate science and test their knowledge about this science. This online Climate Challenge permits players to predict future climate-related conditions, which can then be compared with predictions made by experts when available. One climate-related quest will be posted per month and the player with an answer coming closest to actual values will be that month's winner. [NOAA News]
- Asteroids, climate change and mass extinctions -- You are invited to read this week's Supplemental
Information...In Greater Depth that describes how
geoscientists have gathered evidence of five major mass extinctions
over the last 550 million years from fossil records. These records also
help in reconstructing past climates and help in the understanding of
climate change.
Ocean in the News:
- Eye on the tropics -- Tropical cyclone activity was limited last week:
- In South Indian Ocean basin,
Cyclone Nathan moved westward along the coast of Australia's Northern Territory after entering that basin from the South Pacific Ocean basin at the start of last week. By midweek Nathan finally dissipated. The NASA Hurricane Page has satellite images and additional information on Cyclone Nathan.
- In western North Pacific basin
a tropical depression formed at the end of last week near Pohnpei in the Caroline Islands. This depression eventually became Typhoon Maysak over the weekend, intensifying into a category 2 typhoon on the Saffir-Simpson Scale as it traveled toward the west. By the end of the weekend Typhoon Maysak was approximately 700 miles to the east of Yap and current projections would have this typhoon continue its travels toward the west. See the NASA Hurricane Page for additional information and a satellite image for Tropical Depression 4W that eventually became Typhoon Maysak.
- "Supertide" turned French landmark into an island for first time in 18 years -- A "supertide" on Saturday, 21 March 2015, submerged the causeway leading the famed Mont Saint-Michel, an UNESCO World Heritage Site along the northern French coast, into an island for essentially the first time in 18 years. The "supertide" The Earth-Sun-Moon alignment created this large "supertide" on the 20th as perigee or closest the Moon was to Earth occurred on Thursday (19 March) afternoon, the new moon (when the Moon was between the Earth and the Sun) took place on Friday along with coplanar alignment of these three celestial bodies at the time of the vernal equinox, also on Friday. Recurrence of this orbital configuration is once every 18 years. [ZME Science]
- Mapping reefs and fish is part of scheduled "Ask Us Anything" series -- The public is invited to participate in the Reddit Science "Ask Us Anything" feature this coming Tuesday afternoon, 31 March 2015, that would involve chatting with NOAA scientists who are at sea off the US Virgin Islands aboard the NOAA Ship Nancy Foster. The research expedition is mapping the sprawling coral reed ecosystem in the Caribbean that is home to a vast variety of ocean life. The researchers will answer a wide range of questions on the program and the tools that they use. [NOAA Ocean Service News]
- Expansion of focus and boundaries of national marine sanctuary in Hawaii is proposed -- NOAA National Marine Sanctuaries officials have recently invited public comment on a proposed rule that would expand the size and focus of the agency's Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. This proposed expansion, which would include multiple marine species, was based upon collaboration of NOAA and partners from the public, businesses, scientists and non-governmental organizations. The expansion would be in the waters around Oahu, Kauai and Niihau. [NOAA National Marine Sanctuaries News]
- More frequent big thunderstorms increases rainfall in the tropics -- Using data collected from NASA satellites, scientists from the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science and NASA have found that an increase in the frequency of large organized thunderstorms appears to be responsible for the increase in rainfall across some of the wettest tropical regions over the western Pacific. These storms are referred to as "organized deep convection." [NASA Earth Observatory] [NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies Research News]
- Connecticut residents need better preparation and response for coastal storms -- A report made by researchers at Yale University entitled "Hurricane perceptions of coastal Connecticut Residents" revealed that the majority of coastal residents in the Nutmeg State are ill-prepared for severe coastal storms that can create significant safety and economic threats. Their findings are based upon a recent survey of over 1100 residents along the state's coastline. [NOAA Sea Grant Program News]
- Ending beach nourishment subsidies could cause plummeting coastal values on Atlantic coast -- Researchers at Duke University, the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and Ohio State University warn that if the US Congress would suddenly end federal beach nourishment subsides, the value of many oceanfront properties along the East Coast to dramatically drop. Beach nourishment involves the replenishment of the beach with new sand dredged either from nearby inlets of the offshore sea floor. [Duke University]
- Phytoplankton carbon delivered to ocean depths by swirling currents -- Researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution have found that eddies or swirling currents in the oceans can carry the non-sinking carbon in biomass produced by massive phytoplankton blooms in the surface layers downward into the ocean depths. The organic matter that is transferred to the deep ocean is removed from the near surface waters form many years into the future. The researchers used data on phytoplankton bloom and dissolved oxygen concentrations from sounding profiles obtained from four seaglidders operating to depths of approximately 1000 meters. [Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution News Release]
- Human pollution could create health impacts on deep-water marine fish -- Scientists from Oregon State University and their colleagues from the United Kingdom warn that deep-water fish living in waters on the continental slopes between 2000 feet and one mile have a variety of health problems that may be related to human-caused pollution. In research conducted in the Bay of Biscay of the western coast of France, fish were found to have liver pathologies, tumors and an "intersex" condition. [Oregon State University News]
- Rapid thinning of the Antarctic ice shelves is underway -- In research conducted by Scripps Institution of Oceanography using satellite radar altimetry observations, the thickness of Antarctica's floating ice shelves have decreased by up to 18 percent in several areas during the last two decades. [University of California San Diego News Center]
- An All-Hazards Monitor -- This Web portal provides the user information from NOAA's National Weather Service, FAA and FEMA on
current environmental events that may pose as hazards such as tropical
weather, fire weather, marine weather, severe weather, drought and
floods. [NOAA/NWS Daily Briefing]
- 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 in 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:
- 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)
- 2 April 1513...Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon came
ashore on the Florida coast near present-day St. Augustine and claimed
the territory for the Spanish crown. He is reported to be the first
known European to set foot in Florida. (The History Channel)
- 2 April 1958...One of the most destructive coastal storms
in years battered New England (31 March-3 April). Some beaches between
Portland, ME and Cape Cod, MA were eroded by approximately 50 ft. Miles
of sea walls and bulkheads were either breached or demolished. Many
beachfront cottages in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine were
sandblasted. (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar)
- 2 April 1926...Baden-Baden, a rotor ship
invented by Anton Flettner left Hamburg, Germany on a transatlantic
crossing, arriving in New York on 29 May 1926. The ship used two 9-ft
diameter, 50-ft high cylinders, mounted vertically on the deck at the
bow and the stern for propulsion, utilizing the aerodynamic power of
the Magnus Effect, which builds air pressure behind a rotating
cylinder. (Today in Science History)
- 3 April 1797...Captain Thomas Truxtun, USN, devised and
issued the first known American signal book using numerary system,
encompassing 10 numeral pennants, made of combinations of red, white,
blue, and yellow bunting, with flags for repeaters. This signal book
contained approximately 300 signals. Fog signals were made by gunfire.
Night signals were made by lanterns and gunfire. (Naval Historical
Center)
- 4 April 1581...The famous English navigator, Francis Drake,
completed his circumnavigation of the world (1577 to 1580) and was
knighted by Queen Elizabeth I. (Wikipedia).
Return to DataStreme
Ocean Website
Prepared by AMS DS Ocean Central Staff and Edward J. Hopkins,
Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2015, The American Meteorological Society.