(Message inbox:138)

Date:    Wed, 24 Jan 2001 21:29:36 -0300
To:      mo-sciweekly@polar.org, mpc@lmg.polar.org, verretro@lmg.polar.org,
	 alsuther@nsf.gov, kerb@nsf.gov, ppenhale@nsf.gov
cc:      rossro@lmg.polar.org, kozlowwe@lmg.polar.org,
	 Menzies Dave <menzieda@lmg.polar.org>,
	 Carrillo Christopher <carrilch@lmg.polar.org>,
	 Chapman Erik <chapmaer@lmg.polar.org>, iresonki@lmg.polar.org
From:    "Ross, Robin" <rossro@lmg.polar.org>
Subject: LMG01-01 14 -20 Jan 2001 Palmer LTER cruise

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LMG01-01  2001 January LTER cruise:  14 - 20 January synopsis

During the week of January 14-20 of the annual Palmer LTER summer
cruise, we continued to occupy stations on the cardinal lines, and
collect data on multiple aspects of the ecosystem, from hydrography
to seabirds.  Because of the shortened cruise, we had to modify the
standard sampling plan, and decrease the spatial resolution on both
the 500.* and 300.* cardinal lines.  There are 5 cardinal lines
occupied in the LTER study region during summer, e.g. 200.*, 300.*,
400.*, 500.* and 600.* between the southern ends of Adelaide and
Anvers Islands.  We completed the revised schedule of stations on the
500.*, 400.* and 300.* transect lines, and the inner half of the
200.* line during this week.  Two days of winds gusting over 30 kts
at times slowed our progress somewhat, but we were still able to
deploy most instruments.  The optics package and the FRRF were not
deployed on several occasions due to the seas.  D. Menzies is
investigating the potential sources of the occasional spiking showing
up during CTD casts.  Support from both RPSC and Captain Verret and
the ECO crew has been essential and helped us to maintain a very
intense sampling schedule.

Preliminary analysis of selected samples from the 600.*, 500.* and
400.* transect lines has been completed, and each team has summarized
these shipboard analyses.  Additional results will be done in the
laboratories of the home institutions.  The PI for each team is in
parentheses after the science code.

BP-032 (R. C. Smith) - Kirk Ireson and Sara Searson
Chlorophyll analyses show the typical offshore gradient.  For the top 30m,
nearshore values range from three to seven mg/m^3, while offshore, the
concentrations were < 0.8 mg/m^3.  The shallowest 1% light level was at the
600.100 station (19m), while the deepest was at 85m (station 400.200).  Daily
optics casts with the AC9/Hydroscat package have been going well.  On the
eighteenth, we had very clear weather, so two optics casts were done with the
hopes of getting a good comparison with satellite data.

BP-046 (D. Karl) - Chris Carrillo, Lance Fujieki, Daniel Hover, Matt
Church, and Jenn Brum.
   Measurements of oxygen concentration, phycoerythrin, ectoenzyme
activity, net community oxygen production and respiration are
currently being made on board. Initial analysis of the 600, 500 and
400 LTER grid lines show surface water oxygen concentrations range
from 351 to 409 umols/liter with the highest concentrations found in
the Palmer Basin area. Areas of high surface ocean oxygen
concentrations correlate with high rates of net community oxygen
production of 24 umols O2/liter/day suggesting an active
phytoplankton bloom.

BP-016 (M. Vernet) - Wendy Kozlowski, Karie Sines, Karen Pelletreau,
Erin Macri, Silvia Rodriguez, Mike Thimgan
Preliminary estimates of primary production along the 600, 500 and
400 LTER grid lines have shown similar trends as the chlorophyll,
with clear onshore-offshore as well as North-South gradients.  The
600 line production is slightly above the 92-99 January average, with
the diatom bloom at the inside stations driving production levels as
high as 0.92 gC/m^2.  The 500 and 400 lines, however, show a slightly
lower than average production, with the lowest levels seen at the
outside of the 400 line (0.07gC/m^2).  HPLC pigment analysis is being
done on all samples, and we have also collected fluorescence data
using a Chelsea Instruments Fast Repetition Rate Fluorometer at least
one station per day in conjunction with BP-032-O optics work.

BP-028 (L. Quetin and R. Ross) - Robin Ross, Stephanie Oakes,
Christopher Holmes, Jordan Watson, Holly Rodrigues, Brian Fredin
On the 600.* LTER grid line, Antarctic krill and salps (Salpa
thompsoni) co-occurred at all stations, with highest numbers of salps
at mid- and outer shelf stations, and highest numbers of krill at the
mid-shelf stations.  However, on both the 500.* and 400.* LTER grid
lines salps were sparse, and Antarctic krill numbers were of the same
order as on the 600.* line.  Unlike most Januaries during this 9 year
time series, spawning of Antarctic krill was intense on all three
lines, with spawning frequencies ranging from 9 to 15% of mature
females per day.

BP-013 (W. Fraser) - Erik Chapman and Heidi Geisz
Chinstrap penguins (Pygoscelis antarctica) have been observed along
the 600 - 400 (LTER) grid lines in unprecedented numbers and were
particularly abundant off the shelf break along the 600 grid line.
Along the 600 and 500 grid lines, overall seabird abundance was
highest off the shelf break.  Species richness was also greatest off
the shelf break along the 600 line.   Although there was no
observable trend in richness or abundance relation to the shelf break
on the 400 line, there was a noticeable increase in seabird abundance
over the continental shelf at stations 400.140 and 400.160.

Regards,
Robin Ross, Chris Carrillo, Wendy Kozlowski, Kirk Ireson, Erik Chapman,
David Menzies

