Monday, June 19, 2017

We are back home! Last post from the Chief Sci


Scientists and crew sign the NF1703/04 NOAA Corps flag 
First of all thank you for following our research expedition by reading our blog! My name is Estrella Malca and I was the chief scientist for this survey (NF1704) aboard the NOAA Ship Nancy Foster. What does that mean? Each project has a designated person that takes a leading role on the logistical, scientific and reporting aspect of the entire survey. 
One last selfie!
Estrella (Chief Sci) and Samantha (Senior survey tech)

I love to figure out the 'tetris' of things, so this year's cruise has been challenging but fun! Why challenging? Well, usually we have 6 months+ to prepare for our surveys: buying equipment, supplies, assigning scientists and volunteers to participate, and most importantly, securing any relevant permits as well as communicating with the ship's officers and crew about the multiple operational aspects of our project at sea. However, because of our very recent NOAA RESTORE project selected for funding, we had just two months to get a brand new project planned, signed and delivered on time! Without the rest of the science team, there is no way we can come out here and successfully achieve all of our research goals and deliverables!


We had the pleasure to continue to collaborate with several of our partners and also obtained new research connections!

NF1704 Leg 1 scientists
NF1704 Leg 2 scientists

Estrella and Niki deploy our very last satellite tracked drifter

Here is a list of our NF1704 accomplishments!! We were quite busy this  past month as you can see!


ü  500++ Tunas collected, more than 600 specimens individually measured at sea
ü  90 CTD casts: Depths were (300m, 500m, 1500m, and 2500m). The sensors we used on the CTD included temperature, oxygen, salinity, chlorophyll-a and CDOM, conductivity, PAR.
ü  Continuous measurements of currents (ADCP) from Key West to Progreso and to Miami
ü  Continuous measurement of flow through (TSG) from Key West to Progreso and to Miami
ü  7 SVP Drifters were deployed
ü  546 Flow cytometry samples (phytoplankton, bacteria, water column abundance)
ü  72 Elemental Nitrogen (N2)-fixing organism samples
ü  6 casts with PAR (Photosynthetically-Active Radiation) sensor
ü  207 Microbial Abundances and Biomass samples
ü  95 Sediment Trap Flux samples
ü  78 Thorium concentration profiles (dissolved + particulate)
ü  354 Primary Production and Nitrate Uptake
ü  226 Deckboard Incubations for nitrogen utilization rates
ü  120 Shipboard Nitrate Concentrations
ü  57 Deckboard Incubations for δ15N.
ü  130 Nutrient Profiles for NO3- + NO2,-PO43- and isotope analyses (δ15N and δ18O)
ü  95 Mesozooplankton Biomass and Grazing
ü  48 Growth and Grazing Rate Profiles (8 experiments x 6 depths)
ü  279 Phytoplankton Pigments fluorometric Chla,
ü  210 High-performance liquid chromatography  samples
ü  19 ring net tows (100m)
ü  136 net tows (25m): 120 Bongo-90 (240 jars) & 16 Mini-bongo net tows
ü  16 Mesozooplankton and 16 microzooplankton samples
ü  120 Live-sorted plankton samples
ü  95 specimens selected for genetic analysis
*   40+ Open House attendees. Our outreach event welcomed our scientific counterparts, students, professors, and fishermen in Progresso, Mexico

We hope that our projects will fill in a lot of the gaps about the biogeochemical ecosystem in the Gulf of Mexico as it relates to bluefin tuna research for the Western Atlantic stock. Our results will be shared with local and regional stakeholders like NOAA, ICCAT, among others. Soon, we will get started working up the data! Stay tuned and read our posts!


Group selfie, navigating into to the port of Miami

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