Implementing the Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System

Author(s):  
Philip Bogden ◽  
Neal Pettigrew ◽  
Mary K. Beard ◽  
Lewis Incze ◽  
James Irish
2011 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neal R. Pettigrew ◽  
C. Patrick Fikes ◽  
M. Kate Beard

AbstractThe Northeastern Regional Association of Coastal Ocean Observing Systems (NERACOOS), which began in 2008, includes the University of Maine’s comprehensive data buoy array in the Gulf of Maine (GoM). The University of Maine buoy system started in 2001 as part of the Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System (GoMOOS). The buoys provide a wide variety of oceanographic and marine meteorological data in real time to scientists, environmentalists, the National Weather Service, the U.S. Coast Guard and Canadian Coast Guard, educators, regional natural resource managers, the GoM fishing and maritime industries, and the general public. The GoM observing system is presently undergoing a redesign of the buoy control system to enhance remote access and reduce operational costs. The enhancements will allow remote trouble-shooting and reprogramming of the buoys and subsurface sensors. The system will also accommodate sensors from other research groups and allow them post-deployment control without assistance from our buoy group.Over the near-decade of operation, the system has revealed marked seasonal and interannual variability of the circulation and physical properties of the GoM. In the fall of 2004 to spring of 2005, Doppler currents measured an outflow of deep salty slope waters that suggest a regime shift in the inflow and outflow of transports through the Northeast Channel. During the same period, a salinity anomaly event lowered salinity throughout the GoM by roughly 2 psu by the winter of 2005. In following years, the previously unusual slope outflow and reduced salinity have often reoccurred.


<i>Abstract</i> .—In a collaborative project with a number of New England commercial fishermen, zooplankton was sampled two to three times a month between 2003 and 2005 at the GoMOOS (Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System) Buoy “B” and between 2003 and 2008 at a station on Jeffreys Ledge in the western Gulf of Maine. Additionally, during 2007 and 2008 zooplankton and ichthyoplankton were sampled semimonthly at stations located in Massachusetts Bay and Ipswich Bay, New Hampshire. The authors report here on seasonal and interannual patterns in biomass, diversity, and abundance in the zooplankton at the Jeffreys Ledge station and in the ichthyoplankton at the Massachusetts and Ipswich Bay stations. Notable is the dominance of <i>Calanus finmarchicus </i> on Jeffreys Ledge and the dramatic decline in summer abundance of this species between 2003 and 2005, perhaps related to a shift to lower salinity water during this same period. Interannual differences in timing of peak abundance, and in species dominance of ichthyoplankton, were observed between 2007 and 2008. While these time series provide information and insight about change in the coastal planktonic communities in the western Gulf of Maine, currently there are no observing programs that sample coastal communities at frequency sufficient to show seasonal and interannual change in this region.


2003 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 75-80
Author(s):  
Philip Bogden ◽  
Evan Richert

The vision for a national coastal ocean observing system offers unprecedented opportunity for both research and operational oceanography. The leaders of the movement toward a national system have conceived that system as a federation of linked regional systems, but without specifying how the individual regional systems should be governed. There is an expectation that emerging governance structures shall be as diverse as the regional issues that they address, but there are, as of yet, few examples from which to learn. The Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System (GoMOOS) offers one example. GoMOOS has a non-profit corporate structure that engages users in a partnership between research institutions and operational agencies. Initially, the structure developed to serve the interests of a broad array of users in the Gulf of Maine region, thereby satisfying the Ocean. US definition of a “coastal ocean observing system.” As GoMOOS continues to strengthen partnerships within the region, it seems also to be evolving toward a working example of the more general community notion of a “regional association.”


2005 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 71-77
Author(s):  
Amy Holt Cline ◽  
Janet Campbell ◽  
Tom Shyka

Over the past two years, the UNH Coastal Observing Center and the Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System (GoMOOS) have co-sponsored two week-long teacher workshops that offer curriculum content and hands-on experience in using ocean observation data as a successful teaching tool in the classroom. Teachers ranging from grammar school to high school levels worked to create practical lessons that incorporate ocean observing data into their current classroom settings and are using it today. This paper will explain how the UNH/GOMOOS summer Educator Institutes have been run, what teachers have been learning in these workshops, and how they planned and started using ocean observing data in their classrooms.


OCEANS 2008 ◽  
2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neal R. Pettigrew ◽  
John P. Wallinga ◽  
Linda Mangum ◽  
Francois Neville

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