2023-2024 Science Planning Summary
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2023-2024 USAP Field Season
Project Detail

Project Title

PAL-LTER: Ecological Response to "Press-Pulse" Disturbances Along a Rapidly Changing West Antarctic Peninsula


Palmer Station. Photo by Ben Rosen-Filardo, courtesy of the USAP Photo Library
C-019-L/P Research Location(s): West Antarctic Peninsula

Summary

Event Number:
C-019-L/P
NSF / OPP Award 2224611

Program Director:
Dr. William Ambrose

ASC POC/Implementer:
Kenneth Vicknair / Matthew Erickson / Bruce Felix / Jamee Johnson


Principal Investigator(s)

Dr. Oscar Schofield
oscar@marine.rutgers.edu
Rutgers University
Institute for Marine & Coastal Sciences

Project Web Site:
https://pallter.marine.rutgers.edu/


Location

Supporting Stations: ARSV Laurence M. Gould, Palmer Station
Research Locations: West Antarctic Peninsula


Description

Seasonal sea ice-influenced marine ecosystems at both poles are regions of high productivity concentrated in space and time by local, regional, and remote physical forcing. These polar ecosystems are among the most rapidly changing on Earth. The Palmer Long Term Ecological Research (PAL-LTER) seeks to build on three decades of long-term research along the western side of the Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) to gain new mechanistic and predictive understanding of ecosystem changes in response to disturbances spanning long-term, decadal, and higher-frequency pulse changes driven by a range of processes, including natural climate variability, long-term climate warming, resiliency/recovery in the face of press versus pulse forcing, transformed spatial landscapes, and food-web alterations. We will contribute to fundamental understanding of population and biogeochemical responses for a marine ecosystem experiencing profound change.


Field Season Overview

Laurence M. Gould Five participants of the C-019 project will embark on the ARSV Laurence M. Gould for the LMG24-01 cruise. Underway seawater filtration, 14C radioisotope work, CTD (connectivity, temperature, and depth) sampling, optical instrument data collection, and on-deck incubation experiments will be undertaken to investigate the stress responses of phytoplankton throughout the Western Antarctic Peninsula. Process Studies near Palmer Station will coordinate with Palmer Station-based teams in inflatable boats for work outside the traditional safe boating area.

Palmer Station The PAL-LTER team will continue to study seasonal and local- scale processes at Palmer Station with field sampling and specific, intensively focused laboratory experiments to test hypotheses generated from the fieldwork. The specific requirements for C-019-P include water sampling at Station E twice per week in collaboration with the Van Mooy (C-045) group, EK-80 surveys and optical surveys, incubation experiments, Palmer Canyon collaborative LTER surveys, and the use of the radioisotope 14C.


Deploying Team Members

  • Ahmed El-habashi
  • Oscar Schofield (PI)
  • Sneha Sivaram