RAPID Collaborative Proposal: Spatially-explicit, High-resolution Mapping and Modeling to Quantify Hypoxia and Oil Effects on the Living Resources of the Northern Gulf of Mexico
From the NSF proposal abstract
On April 22, 2010, the drill platform Deepwater Horizon sank in nearly 1,200 m of water in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Since this date various estimates of oil and added chemical dispersants have been released from the site with dispersion both at the surface and at depth. The transport of this oil and dispersants has been influenced by wind-driven currents over the shelf and by the Loop Current and its derivatives offshore. To date the exact amount and paths of movement of the Horizon spill remain speculative. Since 2003, with NOAA-CSCOR funding, this group of investigators has conducted 5 summer cruises in the northern Gulf of Mexico that used high-resolution sampling to define the spatially explicit relationships between physical structure to pelagic zooplankton and fish distributions. Thus this group has one of the most comprehensive, synoptic data sets on temperature, salinity, oxygen, phytoplankton, zooplankton and fish in the northern Gulf of Mexico for conditions prior to the oil leak.
The current RAPID award will allow this group to repeat their high-resolution mapping of hydrography, oxygen, plankton and fish in the northern Gulf of Mexico. The domain of interest will include the previous survey region in the hypoxic zone west of the Mississippi Delta but also the area east of the Mississippi where more oil transport from the spill has been suggested. The cruise will take place in the late summer period because the investigators have 5 years of ?baseline? data during this season to compare the results. The measures of species diversity and abundance, biomass size spectrum, fish diets, fish growth rate potential and ecosystem models will all be extremely useful to assess the possible effects of the oil spill on the living resources of the northern Gulf of Mexico. In addition to the rapid mapping cruise on the inner to mid-shelf, this group also will send scientists on the ORV Oceanus to conduct high resolution vertical zooplankton measurements (LOPC and TAPS) and MOCNESS zooplankton tows at deeper stations and broader mapping surveys to extend our spatial coverage of the affected area. They will coordinate our zooplankton and fish measurements with other investigators assessing the biogeochemical and biological impacts of the BP oil spill. Data from previous NOAA will be deposited in the BCODMO data management facility as well as current measurements and model products.
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
---|---|---|
Cruise track position data from cruises OC468-02, CH1010, EN496, EN509, CH0711, EN510 in the Gulf of Mexico; 2007-2010 (GoMX projects) | 2018-07-23 | Final no updates expected |
Laser Optical Plankton Counter from R/V Oceanus cruise OC468-02 in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 (GoMX - Hypoxia and Oil Effects project) | 2011-09-16 | Final no updates expected |
Principal Investigator: David G. Kimmel
East Carolina University - Institute for Coastal Science and Policy (ECU-ICSP)
Co-Principal Investigator: William C. Boicourt
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES/HPL)
Co-Principal Investigator: Stephen E. Brandt
Sea Grant (SGOR)
Co-Principal Investigator: James J. Pierson
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES/HPL)
Co-Principal Investigator: Michael R. Roman
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES/HPL)
Contact: David G. Kimmel
East Carolina University - Institute for Coastal Science and Policy (ECU-ICSP)
BCO-DMO Data Manager: Stephen R. Gegg
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)
Gulf of Mexico - Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill [GoMX - DHOS]