Note: This project has been funded by multiple continuing grants. This section contains the current project information associated with the most recent award (OCE-2322806, PI: Hopcroft). See the "Awards," "Data Management Plan," and "Files" sections of this page for funding history and past project coordinators. Project information for each award can also be found at NSF's website: www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/.
NSF Award Abstract (OCE-2322806):
This award will establish a Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) program in the Northern Gulf of Alaska (NGA). The NGA is a highly productive subarctic biome where intense environmental variability has profound impacts on lower trophic level organisms and community dynamics that, directly or indirectly, support the iconic fish, crabs, seabirds and marine mammals of Alaska. In the NGA, a pronounced spring bloom and regions of sustained summer production support a stable base of energy-rich zooplankton grazers and a substantial sinking flux of organic matter, thereby efficiently transferring primary production up the food chain and contributing to carbon export. The LTER research team will examine features, mechanisms and processes that drive this productivity and system-wide resilience to understand how short- and long-term climate variability propagates through the environment to influence organisms. This highly productive biome will provide a valuable new component to the LTER network by investigating marine ecosystem changes in a region impacted by warming surface ocean trends, and by leveraging a strong climate context provided by two decades of prior observations and a rich history of coupled biological-physical modeling to advance prediction of ecosystem response to perturbation. To complement the observational and modeling efforts, the NGA LTER includes an Education & Outreach component that will develop videos highlighting the understanding gained from this research, and the activities of scientists in ocean-related STEM careers. These products will be presented to the public through various high-traffic venues, will be incorporated into virtual field trips for K-12 students, and will be available to the LTER network. The NGA LTER program will also serve as a platform to train graduate and undergraduate students across disciplines and in cutting-edge field and data-analysis techniques. Finally, synthetic activities will aid in effective ecosystem-based management of commercially important fisheries in Alaska.
The research focus of the NGA LTER site will be on mechanistic understanding of processes that underlie environmental variability, and the role of the latter in promoting high productivity and resilience. Building on prior knowledge, the investigators will test three hypotheses centered on ecosystem emergent properties: 1. Changes in the hydrologic cycle affect spring bloom production through changes in cloud cover, the stratification/mixing balance, macro- and micronutrient supplies, and transport pathways. 2. Hot-spots of high summer primary and secondary production result from interactions between the fresher Alaska Coastal Current and more saline offshore waters as promoted by shelf morphology and regional winds; hot spot timing and magnitude will be influenced by changes in the hydrologic cycle. 3. Nutritional and life history patterns of NGA consumers minimize trophic mismatch, buffering spatial and temporal variability in lower trophic level production and leading to resilience in the face of long-term climate change. The investigators will address these hypotheses with an integrated research program that includes: a) seasonal time series studies addressing short- and long-term environmental and ecosystem variability through a spring-to-fall field cruise- and mooring-based observational program, building upon and enhancing the Seward Line times series, and leveraging existing collaborations to obtain higher trophic level data; b) process studies that focus on hypothesized mechanisms leading to variability and enhancement of NGA production in time and space; c) modeling studies that incorporate physical and biogeochemical observations, provide a framework for testing hypotheses, and predict ecosystem responses to projected environmental changes; d) a data management component that provides a public platform for data visualization and synthesis by LTER colleagues, educators & students, and resource managers.
Funding: The NGA LTER is supported by funds from the North Pacific Research Board (NPRB) and the The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council (EVOSTC) through Gulf Watch Alaska, in addition to NSF awards.
This project is supported by continuing grants with name variations:
Principal Investigator: Russell R. Hopcroft
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Co-Principal Investigator: Ana Aguilar-Islas
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Co-Principal Investigator: Seth L. Danielson
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Co-Principal Investigator: Jerome Fiechter
University of California-Santa Cruz (UCSC)
Co-Principal Investigator: Gwenn Hennon
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Scientist: Claudine Hauri
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Scientist: David Hill
Oregon State University (OSU)
Scientist: Robert Kaler
United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)
Scientist: Thomas Kelly
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Scientist: Elizabeth Labunkski
United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)
Scientist: Petra H. Lenz
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa (HIGP)
Scientist: Jennifer Questel
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Scientist: Suzanne Strom
Western Washington University - Shannon Point Marine Center (SPMC)
Contact: Russell R. Hopcroft
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF)
Data Manager: Chris Turner
Axiom Data Science
Long Term Ecological Research network [LTER]
North Pacific Research Board Long-Term Monitoring Program [NPRB LTM]
Gulf Watch Alaska [GWA]
DMP for Award OCE-1656070 (2017-2023) (275.33 KB)
07/22/2024
NGA_LTER_Phase_II_DMP.pdf (70.56 KB)
08/09/2024