CTD casts from the R/V Gulf Challenger at the Wilkinson Basin Time Series Station in the Gulf of Maine from 2004 to 2018.

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/778959
Data Type: Cruise Results
Version: 0
Version Date: 2019-10-09

Project
» Collaborative Research: Mechanisms supporting persistence of a key plankton species during climate change on the Northwest Atlantic continental shelf (Calanus Persistence GoM)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Runge, Jeffrey A.Gulf of Maine Research Institute (GMRI)Principal Investigator
Salisbury, JosephUniversity of New Hampshire (UNH)Co-Principal Investigator
York, Amber D.Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager


Coverage

Spatial Extent: N:43.054 E:-69.8598 S:42.8607 W:-70.6592
Temporal Extent: 2004-05-21 - 2018-03-01

Dataset Description

CTD casts at the Wilkinson Basin Time Series Station, Gulf of Maine from 2004 to 2018.

Related dataset:
WBTS Copepod abundance per m2: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/768306

These data were published in Runge et al. (2015) and Record et al. (2019).


Methods & Sampling

Sampling at the Wilkinson Basin Time Series (WBTS) station followed as a guideline the protocols established by the Atlantic Zone Monitoring Program (AZMP) established by Fisheries and Oceans Canada (Mitchell et al. 2002).

Sampling and analytical procedures:

Environmental data. The R/V Gulf Challenger system comprised a Sea-Bird Electronics (SBE) 25Plus CTD, an SBE-55 Sampling Rosette with six four-liter Niskin bottles, a dedicated Hawboldt Industries SPR 1424/S Science winch, and a SBE-33 real-time monitoring and sampling deck unit. The system provided high-resolution vertical profiling of hydrographic properties (e.g. conductivity, salinity, temperature), physiochemical properties (e.g. Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR)), and surrogates for biological and geological processes (e.g. dissolved oxygen, chlorophyll-a fluorescence, and beam transmittance). The raw CTD data and bottle trips were acquired by SBE Seasave on a Windows 7 workstation and were processed from hex files to .cnv files. Post cruise data processing was completed on a Windows 7 machine running SEABIRD SBE DATA Processing version 7.22.5 At most stations, Niskin bottles were used to capture water samples at depths of 2, 10, 20 and 40 meters. To measure chlorophyll a concentration at discrete depths, duplicate, 100 mL or 500-550 mL subsamples were collected from Niskin bottles at the surface, 10, 20 and 40 meters. Water was filtered immediately on the vessel using glass fiber filters (GF/F) and polycarbonate membrane filters with pore sizes of 0.7 µm and 0.1µm. Chlorophyll-a concentrations were calculated were using equations in Strickland and Parsons (1972). Prior to 2014, IOP profilers calibrated annually were used to measure water column stimulated fluorescence. After 2014, the nominal chlorophyll-a readings from stimulated fluorescence measured with a Wetlabs Wetstar Chlorophyll Fluorometer S/N WSS-164 were corrected with chlorophyll concentrations measured from bottle samples.


Data Processing Description

Comments from originally submitted ctd cast files:

!comments=!PLEASE NOTE: Users of data will be required to provide proper credit and acknowledgment of the provider
!comments=!Users of data are encouraged to discuss relevant findings with the provider early in the research.
!comments=!The user is required to give all providers of the data being used a copy of any manuscript resulting
!comments=!from use of the data prior to the initial submission for publication, thus giving the data provider
!comments=!an opportunity to comment on the paper. The provider(s) shall have the right to be named as a co-author.
!comments=!Oxygen was not validated via winklers but sensor was sent back annually for calibration
!comments=!Discrete chlorophyll samples collected on most cruises to validate wetlabs chlorophyll sensor

BCO-DMO Data Manager Processing Notes:
* added a conventional header with dataset name, PI name, version date
* modified parameter names to conform with BCO-DMO naming conventions
* blank values in this dataset are displayed as "nd" for "no data." nd is the default missing data identifier in the BCO-DMO system.
* individual cast text files combined into one dataset with added columns cast_id,lat_start,lon_start,ISO_DateTime_start from values parsed in the header comments of each file.
* various missing data identifiers (e.g. -9999,-999,-9999.0000) replaced with default BCO-DMO identifier "nd" meaning "no data."


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Related Publications

Mitchell, M. R., Harrison, G., Pauley, K., Gagné, A., Maillet, G., & Strain, P. (2002). Atlantic zonal monitoring program sampling protocol (pp. iv+-23). Fisheries & Oceans Canada, Maritimes Region, Ocean Sciences Division, Bedford Institute of Oceanography.Canadian Technical Report of Hydrography and Ocean Sciences 223. ISSN 071 1-6764; http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.482.7471&rep=rep1&type=pdf
Methods
Record, N., Runge, J., Pendleton, D., Balch, W., Davies, K., … Thompson, C. (2019). Rapid Climate-Driven Circulation Changes Threaten Conservation of Endangered North Atlantic Right Whales. Oceanography, 32(2). doi:10.5670/oceanog.2019.201
Results
Runge, J. A., Ji, R., Thompson, C. R. S., Record, N. R., Chen, C., Vandemark, D. C., … Maps, F. (2015). Persistence of Calanus finmarchicus in the western Gulf of Maine during recent extreme warming. Journal of Plankton Research, 37(1), 221–232. doi:10.1093/plankt/fbu098
Results

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
cast_idCTD cast identifier unitless
lat_startLatitude at the start of the cast decimal degrees
lon_startLongitude at the start of the cast decimal degrees
ISO_DateTime_UTC_startDate and Time (UTC) at the start of the cast in ISO 8601 format yyyy-mm-ddTHH:MMZ unitless
depthDepth meters (m)
tempTemperature degrees Celsius (c)
salSalinity practical salinity units (PSU)
stimfunknown micrograms per liter (ug/L)
oxygenDissolved oxygen micromoles per kilogram (uMol/KG)


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Instruments

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Niskin bottles
Generic Instrument Name
Niskin bottle
Dataset-specific Description
SBE-55 Sampling Rosette with six four-liter Niskin bottles
Generic Instrument Description
A Niskin bottle (a next generation water sampler based on the Nansen bottle) is a cylindrical, non-metallic water collection device with stoppers at both ends. The bottles can be attached individually on a hydrowire or deployed in 12, 24, or 36 bottle Rosette systems mounted on a frame and combined with a CTD. Niskin bottles are used to collect discrete water samples for a range of measurements including pigments, nutrients, plankton, etc.

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Sea-Bird Electronics (SBE) 25Plus CTD
Generic Instrument Name
CTD Sea-Bird 25
Generic Instrument Description
The Sea-Bird SBE 25 SEALOGGER CTD is battery powered and is typically used to record data in memory, eliminating the need for a large vessel, electrical sea cable, and on-board computer. All SBE 25s can also operate in real-time, transmitting data via an opto-isolated RS-232 serial port. Temperature and conductivity are measured by the SBE 3F Temperature sensor and SBE 4 Conductivity sensor (same as those used on the premium SBE 9plus CTD). The SBE 25 also includes the SBE 5P (plastic) or 5T (titanium) Submersible Pump and TC Duct. The pump-controlled, TC-ducted flow configuration significantly reduces salinity spiking caused by ship heave, and in calm waters allows slower descent rates for improved resolution of water column features. Pressure is measured by the modular SBE 29 Temperature Compensated Strain-Gauge Pressure sensor (available in eight depth ranges to suit the operating depth requirement). The SBE 25's modular design makes it easy to configure in the field for a wide range of auxiliary sensors, including optional dissolved oxygen (SBE 43), pH (SBE 18 or SBE 27), fluorescence, transmissivity, PAR, and optical backscatter sensors. More information from Sea-Bird Electronics: http:www.seabird.com.

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Wetlabs Wetstar Chlorophyll Fluorometer S/N WSS-164
Generic Instrument Name
WETLabs WETStar fluorometer
Dataset-specific Description
Used to measure chlorophyll concentrations.
Generic Instrument Description
Submersible fluorometer designed for through-flow or pumped CTD applications manufactured by WetLabs and which can be configured for various types of fluorescence. The probe has a temperature range of 0-30 degrees C and a depth rating of 600m.

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
SBE-33 real-time monitoring and sampling deck unit
Generic Instrument Name
Sea-Bird SBE 33 Carousel Deck Unit
Generic Instrument Description
The rack-mountable SBE 33 provides power and real-time data acquisition and control for an SBE 32 Carousel Water Sampler that has the SBE 33 interface option installed in its pylon. The SBE 33 is compatible with all Carousel sizes - full size, compact, and sub-compact. When powered and controlled by the SBE 33, the Carousel can be used: - with an SBE 19, 19plus, 19plus V2, 25, 25plus, or 49 CTD - without a CTD - with a Neil Brown Mk III CTD (requires optional interface for both SBE 32 and 33) The SBE 33 can also provide power and real-time data acquisition and control for the smaller SBE 55 ECO Water Sampler used with an SBE 19, 19plus, 19plus V2, 25, 25plus, or 49 CTD, or no CTD. See http://www.seabird.com/sbe33-deck-unit for further details.


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Deployments

GC_GoM_2004-2018

Website
Platform
R/V Gulf Challenger
Report
Start Date
2004-05-21
End Date
2018-03-01
Description
Wilkinson Basin is one of the three major basins, where depths exceed 200 meters, in the Gulf of Maine. The Wilkinson Basin Time Series station (WBTS) is located at a depth of 256 meters and is approximately 38 nautical miles from New Castle, NH, home port of the University of New Hampshire research vessel, R/V Gulf Challenger. 


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Project Information

Collaborative Research: Mechanisms supporting persistence of a key plankton species during climate change on the Northwest Atlantic continental shelf (Calanus Persistence GoM)

Coverage: Gulf of Maine/Northwest Atlantic Ocean


Description from NSF award abstract:
In the Gulf of Maine region, rapid warming of the ocean surface in recent years has raised concern in the research and resource management communities, fishing industry and the general public about effects on the coastal marine ecosystem. This interdisciplinary, collaborative project will improve understanding of the physical and biological processes controlling the abundance of a planktonic animal that is particularly important in the food web of the northeast coastal ocean. About the size of a grain of rice, the marine copepod Calanus finmarchicus is the primary prey for herring and other forage fish, as well as for the endangered northern right whale. This study will examine whether transport of C. finmarchicus into the Gulf of Maine from cold Canadian waters, in combination with growth and reproduction in the relatively cold Maine Coastal Current, is sufficient to supply the region with the numbers needed to attract and nourish the fish, seabirds and mammals that rely on its energy rich life stages, despite recent ocean warming. The research team will develop a computer model that links extensive understanding of the species' life history with ocean currents and temperature. Results from the model will be tested against field collections at two locations. This study will also contribute to the new Integrated Sentinel Monitoring Network, a joint effort planned by federal and state agencies with academic research participation to monitor future ecosystem change on the northeastern coastal shelf. It will train a graduate student and postdoctoral scientist in interdisciplinary research and also provide support for an early-career investigator.

The project will take a process modeling approach that takes into account regional and mesoscale interaction between life history and bathymetry and circulation to improve understanding of planktonic species distribution shifts. It will combine two decades of research on Calanus finmarchicus life history, including diapause, with a high resolution regional circulation model into an innovative application of a three dimensional, physical-biological model. The modeling approach represents an advancement of climate forecasts of species ranges by coupling a Lagrangian perspective with local processes to better resolve complex range boundaries. It will use Lagrangian parameters such as finite-scale or finite-time Lyapunov exponents, translating particle trajectories into scalar fields that represent the structure of the advective regime. The model will be informed by and tested with measurements of vital rates and demographic data collected on a research vessel at two time series stations. It will be used in backward-in-time and forward-in-time modes to test hypotheses about sources and destinations of C. finmarchicus in the Gulf of Maine, effects of match/mismatch in phenologies, and exploration effects of climate forced scenarios on advective pathways.



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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