Return-Path: robin@icess.ucsb.edu Delivery-Date: Tue Feb 1 08:48 PST 200 Received: from [128.111.102.198] (QR3.msi.ucsb.edu [128.111.102.198]) by guardian.icess.ucsb.edu (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id IAA28307; Tue, 1 Feb 2000 08:48:41 -0800 (PST) X-Sender: robin@mail.icess.ucsb.edu Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2000 08:51:13 -0800 To: lterpalpi, quetinla@nbp.polar.org, fraserbi@palmer.usap.nsf.gov From: Maria Vernet (by way of Robin Ross) Subject: LM GOULD WEEKLY SCIENCE REPORT 17-22 Jan Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Length: 6861 ARSV Laurence M. Gould REPORT 17-22 JANUARY 2000 Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) Cruise During this week we continued sampling in the LTER grid on the continental shelf (300 and 200 lines) and spent a day at sea in Marguerite Bay in collaboration with BAS scientists. Ice was 8/10 to 10/10 in most of Marguerite Bay and to mid shelf at 67.5 S along the 200 line. We were unable to sampling inside Marguerite Bay, Southwest of 200.-020 due to heavy ice. We observed large phytoplankton accumulations at the ice edge in the Northern part of Marguerite Bay but lower concentrations elsewhere. Weather deteriorated on Jan 20th and continues windy. We have only missed one offshore station due to bad weather conditions. Overall things have worked smoothly for all participants. Primary production continues to be lower than the average of 1995-1999 years for the same locations for this time of the year, resulting also in higher nutrient concentrations in the water column. In spite of lower phytoplankton concentrations, large centric diatoms are present both inshore and offshore, dominated mostly by Corethron cryophilum and Chaetoceros spp. We are now nearly caught up in analyzing the chlorophyll samples. At the beginning of the week, the fluorometer was calibrated with a chlorophyll dilution series. However, we had a problem of randomly recycling its power to the point where the unit was unusable. It turned out that resetting the date to 1999 made the problem disappear (Y2K issue). The maximum found has been 8.8 microgram chlorophyll a per liter at station 200.000. The casts of Profiling Reflectance Radiometer (PRR) to measure water-column optics have been half as deep (average 33 m) as we cut a significant amount of cable (length went from ~250m to ~125m). We have been doing double casts to select the best/deepest of the two. We continued sampling for dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), dissolved oxygen (DO) and microbial abundance and activity parameters. Deep water DO values on outer stations(<500 m) match well with last years data. Mid water (40-300m) values on 600 line are much lower than last year (the gradient has moved up in the water column). This is interesting because the profiles on the 400 line match quite well with last years data. Maybe there was deeper winter mixing or more upper circumpolar deep water has move onto the shelf along the 600 line. At certain stations there were sub-surface DO maxima which are rare to see. In Marguerite Bay (Avian Shallow) the surface DO's were extremely high (>460 uM) and an intense bloom situation was obvious. Ectoenzyme activities showed expected trends in the 600 to 300 lines, with highest proteolytic rates in the top 20-40 m and rapidly decreasing with depth. Inshore stations showed higher activities than off shore stations possibly correlated to higher bacterial biomass/cell abundances near shore (flow cytometry and lipopolysaccharides, LPS, samples to be analyzed). On Tuesday 18 January 4 participants were able to get ashore at Ginger Island, where there are approximately 3,000 pairs of adelie penguins nesting. Our job here was to stomach lavage 20 adelies in order to have a look at what their diet consists of in the Marguerite Bay area. This data will be analyzed with our ongoing adelie diet sampling work at Torgerson Island near Palmer Station. The ice was looming off Ginger Island most of the day and we had to keep a close eye on things as we processed our birds on the beach. In the end we managed to get samples from 16 of the 22 birds that we stomach lavaged. Our observations from the bridge while in ice on the 200 line reveled the highest concentrations of marine mammals on this cruise. Crab eater seals were the most common marine mammal observed on the sea ice. On 20 January a lone Emperor Penguin was seen on a flow at the edge of the ice field on the 200 line. On 22 January a very rare vagrant was spotted during our bridge watch, 2 black necked swans normally found in South America. The last of our concentrated effort will be our foraging grid observations South of Anvers Island in the latter part of this cruise. We continued to find salps and heavy phytoplankton in our nets at outside stations on the 300 and 200 lines, although the salps were not in such large numbers as on the more northern lines. Krill numbers were not high at any outside stations but we managed to get a good spawning experiment from just 40 animals at station 200.160. These krill were caught with a lot of salps which usually damages the krill in the net but about half of the krill in this catch were still healthy and swimming. We weren't sure if we would get any animals further out on the 200 line so we decided to use them. This was a fortunate decision, not only because we didn't get krill at 200.180 and were weathered out of sampling 200.200, but also because 13 of the 28 females in this experiment have spawned. The inside stations on the 200 line had too much ice for us to tow the Biosonics but we were still able to sample with the nets. We were interested in finding out if we would catch more krill in the ice as at Palmer earlier this season we had usually only seen krill in any numbers when there was ice around. Stations at the ice edge, between 200.040-200.120, had the larger amounts of krill than any other transect. On January 18 we hosted scientists from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) at Rothera on the LMG for the day. The party was led by Dr. Lloyd Peck and Paul Rose, Base Commander. It was a wonderful opportunity for us to interact with the BAS scientists and learn about each other's research. We cross-calibrated the CTDs used in the nearshore sampling off Rothera and Palmer Station with our shipboard CTD package and were able to collect live krill for feeding experiments at Rothera. We also had some great zooplankton discussions and exchanged information on how we conduct our research. They are just beginning a near-shore sampling program for krill and are very interested in making their data collection consistent with ours to facilitate intercomparison. In addition, 4 BAS scientists participated in the penguin sampling at Ginger Island. They were ashore for excavation work looking at avian paleo ecology. We thank all of them for the warm reception at Rothera Base. Information on the cruise, the Palmer LTER program and the journal from the teacher in this field season (Mimi Wallace) can be found at the Jan 2000 cruise page http://www.icess.ucsb.edu/lter/field/00jan. We thank the ECO crew (Robert Verret, Master), ASA personnel (Randy Sliester, MPC), and personnel in Palmer Station (Robert Ferrel, Station Manager) for their support on carrying out a successful sampling program. (Maria Vernet, Chief Scientist, for S-013, S-016, S-021, S-028, S-032, S-046)