Weekly Ocean News
DATASTREME OCEAN WEEK NINE: 5-9 April
2010
ITEMS OF
INTEREST
- (Wednesday) Major Indonesian
earthquake creates minor tsunamis -- A major earthquake that
was rated by the US Geological Survey as a 7.7-magnitude earthquake
struck in the Indian Ocean approximately off the Indonesian island of
Sumatra during the predawn hours of Wednesday (local time). This
earthquake, which occurred at a depth of 19.3 miles, injured several
people and triggered two small tsunamis that measured a height of less
than one foot. Indonesia's Meteorological and Geophysics Agency and the
US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center had issued tsunami warnings quickly
after the earthquake struck, but were canceled approximately two hours
later. [CNN]
- Summer teacher research fellowship -- Cassie
Gurbisz, Program Manager for the University of Maryland Center for
Environmental Sciences has announced that COSEE (Centers for Ocean
Sciences Education Excellence) Coastal Trends is looking to fill a
summer teacher research fellowship position for this coming summer
2010. Middle or high school science teachers are encouraged to apply
through 15 May 2010 at http://www.coseecoastaltrends.net/programs/scientisteducatorpartnership/teacherresearchexperience/
or contact Cassie at cgurbisz@umces.edu.
- 50th anniversary of first weather satellite hailed
--
Last Thursday, officials from NOAA and NASA took time to
celebrate the 50th anniversary of the launch of TIROS-1 (Television
Infrared Observation Satellite), the first satellite dedicated to
weather observation. The officials not only hailed the launch of this
satellite as an example of the strong partnership between their two
agencies, but as an event that "forever changed weather forecasting." [NOAA
News] [NASA]
Ocean in the News:
- Eye on the tropics ---
During the last week:
In the Southern Indian Ocean basin, Tropical Storm Robyn (also known as
23S) formed late last week west of Australia's Cocos Island and moved
southward over the past weekend. For more information concerning this
tropical storm, together with satellite imagery, consult the NASA
Hurricane Page.
In the South Pacific, Tropical Storm Paul, which had formed during the
previous week over the Gulf of Carpentaria, moved onshore along the
coast of Australia's Northern Territory early last week and dissipated.
For more information and satellite imagery on Tropical Storm Paul,
consult NASA
Hurricane Center.
- New Northeast groundfish management measures
announced --
Last week, NOAA officials announced the agency's new
management measures that will take effect in May designed to end
overfishing of Northeast groundfish such as cod and flounder. These
measures, which received NOAA support, were developed by the New
England Fishery Management Council and would help in the rebuilding of
these fish stock. [NOAA
News] - Old ship recovered from the
"Graveyard of the Atlantic" --
The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission will
attempt to move the remnants of a 17th or 18th century wooden ship to
more protected location behind the Currituck Beach Lighthouse. This
wreck is believed to be the oldest ship ever recovered from the waters
of North Carolina's Outer Banks. [Outer
Banks Sentinel] [Editor's note: Special
thanks goes to Terri Kirby Hathaway, LIT Leader and Marine Education
Specialist for the North Carolina Sea Grant Program in Manteo, NC, for
forwarding this article. EJH]
- New interactive mapping tool for marine protected
areas is unveiled --
NOAA’s National Marine Protected Areas Center recently
announced that a new interactive online mapping tool has been placed
onto the Web that will allow the public and scientists to view spatial
boundaries and access data for more than 1000 of the nation's
designated marine protected areas. [NOAA
News] - New mathematical model describes
coral demise in warming waters --
Cornell University researchers have created mathematical
models describing the bacterial community dynamics involved with
bleaching and killing coral in warming waters of the Caribbean, Indian
Ocean and the South Pacific off the Australian coast. [EurekAlert!]
- Blind fish help inspire new sensory system for
robot subs --
Researchers at Germany's Technische Universitaet Muenchen
have developed an experimental autonomous underwater robot called
"Snookie" that has an artificial sensory system that was inspired by
the sensory organs of blind fish. The new underwater robotic subs would
be able to react intelligently to their surroundings. [EurekAlert!]
- Broadband acoustic imaging made of the ocean --
Researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution have
developed two advanced broadband acoustic systems designed to upgrade
the ability of oceanographers to count and classify not only fish
species, but to point locations of tiny zooplankton. [Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution] - Bacteria
can play a vital role in an important gas cycle associated with climate
change --
Researchers at the United Kingdom's University of Essex
have found that several types of bacteria tend to consume isoprene
released into the atmosphere. Isoprene, an important industrial gas,
reacts with other atmospheric constituents to produce ozone or to
prolong the lifetime of atmospheric methane, both greenhouse gases. The
isoprene-degrading bacteria appear to be concentrated around coastal
zones, where algae produce marine isoprene. [EurekAlert!]
- Ocean acidification represents the "evil twin" of
global warming --
Researchers at Australia's ARC Centre of Excellence for
Coral Reef Studies warn that increased emissions of carbon dioxide due
to human activity are driving dangerous changes in the chemistry and
ecosystems of the global oceans resulting in ocean acidification that
would occur in combination of global warming due to the increased
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. [ARC
Centre of Excellence in Coral Reef Studies] - Could
ice sheet melt have been a trigger for the "Big Freeze"?
A research team that included a member of the United
Kingdom's University of Sheffield claim that the rapid global cooling
period approximately 13,000 years ago known as the "Big Freeze" or
Younger Dryas could have been caused by the melting of the large
Laurentide ice sheet over North America, which would have channeled
sufficient meltwater into the Arctic Ocean to shut down the northern
continuation of the Gulf Stream and cause a large drop in temperatures
across Europe. [EurekAlert!]
- 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 183-185 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:
- 6 April 1894...President Grover Cleveland authorized
enforcement of the Paris Award concerning the preservation of fur seals
in Alaska. (USCG Historian's Office)
- 6 April 1909...The American explorer, Commander Robert E.
Peary, USN, along with assistant Matthew Henson, and four Eskimos
reported reaching the geographic North Pole; however, navigational
errors may have meant that they were a few miles away from the exact
pole. (Naval Historical Center) (The History Channel)
- 6 April 1913...USRC Seneca, a derelict
destroyer (whose mission was to locate and destroy abandoned wrecks
that were still afloat and a menace to navigation), inaugurated the
Revenue Cutter Service's participation in the International Ice Patrol.
(USCG Historian's Office)
- 8-10 April 1958...A global 48-hr precipitation record was
established at Aurere, La Reunion Island, when 97.1 in. of rain from a
tropical cyclone fell on the Indian Ocean island. (The Weather Doctor)
- 8-14 April 1984...Intense Tropical Cyclone Kaimsy crossed
and re-crossed the northern portion of Madagascar. Winds exceeding 112
mph destroyed 80 percent of Antseranana and Mahajanga. Rainfall from
this system totaled 27.99 in. Eighty-two people were killed and 100,000
were made homeless. Damage was greater than 150 million US dollars.
(Accord's Weather Guide Calendar) (The Weather Doctor)
- 9 April 1770...The English explorer Captain James Cook
discovered Botany Bay on the Australian continent.
- 10 April 1877...The first of two great coastal storms
struck the Virginia and North Carolina coasts. The Oregon Inlet was
widened by three-quarters of a mile. The "entire topography of country
is materially altered," according to a description of the altering of
sand dunes at Cape Hatteras, NC. (Intellicast)
- 10 April 1998...Northeast winds at 40 mph on the 9th
and 10th combined with high levels of Lake Erie
produced waves to 14 ft along the lakeshore in Ottawa and Sandusky
Counties in Ohio. Much damage resulted, along with the destruction of
10 houses. Bulldozers were needed to clear the debris from roads.
Downtown Port Clinton streets were flooded. (Accord's Weather Guide
Calendar)
- 11 April 1803...A twin-screw propeller steamboat was
patented by John Stevens of Hoboken, NJ. (Today in Science History)
- 11 April 1900...The U.S. Navy acquired its first submarine,
a 53-foot craft designed by Irish immigrant John P. Holland that was
propelled by gasoline while on the surface and by electricity when
submerged. (Today in Science History)
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Prepared by AMS DS Ocean Central Staff and Edward J. Hopkins,
Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2010, The American Meteorological Society.