4.3 Article

MONITORING ALASKAN ARCTIC SHELF ECOSYSTEMS THROUGH COLLABORATIVE OBSERVATION NETWORKS

Journal

OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 35, Issue 3-4, Pages 198-209

Publisher

OCEANOGRAPHY SOC

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. ALTIMA [M09PG00016, M12PG00021, M13PG00026]
  2. AMBON [NOPP-NA14NOS0120158, NOPP-NA19NOS0120198]
  3. Bering Strait moorings [NSF-OPP-AON-PLR-1758565, NSF-OPP-PLR-1107106]
  4. BLE-LTER [NSF-OPP-1656026]
  5. CEO [NPRB-L36]
  6. ONR [N000141712274, N000142012413]
  7. DBO [NSF-AON-1917469, NOAA-ARP CINAR-22309.07]
  8. HFR, AOOS Arctic glider, and Passive Acoustics at CEO and Bering Strait [NA16NOS0120027]
  9. WABC [NSF-OPP-1733564]
  10. ArCS Project [JPMXD1300000000]
  11. ArCS II Project [JPMXD1420318865]
  12. Seabird surveys [M17PG00017, M17PG00039, M10PG00050]
  13. NPRB [637]
  14. Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, & Ecosystem Studies (CICOES) under NOAA Cooperative Agreement [NA20OAR4320271, 2021-1163, EcoFOCI-1026, 5315]
  15. U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) [N000142012413, N000141712274] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Defense (DOD)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The ongoing scientific programs in the Alaskan Arctic continental shelves aim to monitor marine environmental and ecological systems and changes. These programs are a collaborative effort involving various organizations and institutions, providing rich information and extensive spatial coverage. They contribute to understanding the impacts of declining Arctic sea ice and warming water temperatures on ecosystems.
Ongoing scientific programs that monitor marine environmental and ecological systems and changes comprise an informal but collaborative, information -rich, and spatially extensive network for the Alaskan Arctic continental shelves. Such programs reflect contributions and priorities of regional, national, and international funding agencies, as well as private donors and communities. These science programs are operated by a variety of local, regional, state, and national agencies, and academic, Tribal, for-profit, and nongovernmental nonprofit entities. Efforts include research ship and autonomous vehicle surveys, year-long mooring deployments, and observations from coastal communities. Inter-program coordination allows cost-effective leveraging of field logistics and collected data into value-added information that fosters new insights unattainable by any single program operating alone. Coordination occurs at many levels, from discussions at marine mammal co-management meetings and inter-agency meetings to scientific symposia and data workshops. Together, the efforts rep-resented by this collection of loosely linked long-term monitoring programs enable a biologically focused scientific foundation for understanding ecosystem responses to warming water temperatures and declining Arctic sea ice. Here, we introduce a variety of currently active monitoring efforts in the Alaskan Arctic marine realm that exem-plify the above attributes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available