| |
July 31, 2008
Highlights
| The Mid-Atlantic Bight National Undersea
Research Program at Rutgers has been conducting pilot
projects with the REMUS autonomous underwater vehicle in cooperation
with federal, state and academic investigators. Recent missions
demonstrated the utility of the AUV to provide information
to the National Marine Fisheries Services, resource management
groups, and the scientific community. These projects include:
Telemetering Atlantic Sturgeon,/ Acipenser oxyrhynchus,/
in the Norrie Point – Hyde Park section of the Hudson
River Valley, by merging REMUS and Lotek hydrophone technology.
This work included the application of the side scan capabilities
of REMUS to characterize habitat utilized by the sturgeon.
Tom Grothues, Joe Dobarro, and Jessica Hoffman, a RIOS student,
provided the field support for this project in collaboration
with personnel from the Hudson River National Estuarine Research
Reserve and the New York Department of Environmental Conservation.
The REMUS, configured with a hydrophone nose cone, detected
and mapped acoustically tagged sturgeon in several regions
of the project area. This project demonstrated the feasibility
of using an independent, mobile platform to detect, track,
and identifying preferential habitat for finfish. It is also
marked the first time that an AUV may have been used in this
capacity.
In collaboration with scientists and geologists from Coastal
Carolina University, Conway, South Carolina and with the support
of the South Carolina Sea Grant Program, MAB NURP personnel
deployed the REMUS vehicle to map hypoxic developments and
potential ground water seepage areas along the northern coast
of South Carolina. This effort supported long-term efforts
by Coastal Carolina University, South Carolina Sea Grant,
and the University of South Carolina to understand marine
and terrestrial processes contributing to low dissolved oxygen
events occurring with greater frequency along the Carolina
coast. During a nearly ten hour mission, REMUS profiled the
water column collecting in excess of 33,700 water quality,
bathymetric, and current descriptor measurements, as well
as, bottom side scan imagery along the vehicle’s 56
km (32 miles) mission path.
Working with members of the New Jersey Sea Scallop Industry
and other investigators, MAB NURP personnel have been testing
the efficacy of using an AUV, i.e., REMUS, and side scan technology
for assessing sea scallop stock distribution, relative abundance,
and habitat characterization in a commercially productive
fishing area off of Point Pleasant, New Jersey. To improve
upon existing capability, MAB NURP personnel will be investigating
the applicability of integrating adaptive technologies, such
as a rapid fire camera system, to enhance the REMUS vehicle’s
capacity of bathymetric mapping and (fishery) stock assessment. |
| |
| On July 11, 2008, the Conserve Wildlife Foundation
of NJ honored Stacy Hagan with a reception at the Rutgers University
Marine Field Station in Tuckerton (RUMFS). Stacy was awarded
posthumously, the 2008 Women & Wildlife Award, in recognition
of her "leadership as a marine scientist and a mentor for
women for nearly two decades." Stacy's award was a framed
print of a mummichog, the subject of much of her research. To
read the story by Patricia Shapella, click on link http://conservewildlifenj.org/explorations/summer08/reception.html
or click here. |
| |
|
|
|
|
| Conserve Wildlife
Foundation of New Jersey's reception honoring Stacy Moore Hagan. |
Margaret O'Gorman, Exec. Dir. of Conserve
Wildlife Foundation of NJ, presents award to Roland Hagan |
Lisa Auermuller reads from Stacy's journal
entries to illustrate her strength of character. |
Roland and Marilyn DiGiacobbe (far rt) of
Richard Stockton College of NJ Foundation, introduces Jamie
Caridad (ctr), first recipient of Stacy Moore Hagan Memorial
Scholarship. |
(Lt to rt) Ken Able; Roland, Ryland and Rutger
Hagan; Lisa Auermuller; and Margaret O'Gorman. |
| Pictures courtesy of Patricia
Shapella, Conserve Wildlife Foundation of NJ |
| On June 1, 2008, Jaime Caridad joined the Tuckerton
Lab at RUMFS as a summer intern. Jaime was the recipient of
the first Stacy Moore Hagan Scholarship from the Stockton College
Foundation. Her experience at RUMFS included sampling, seining
for Hogchokers, as well as interacting with the Girl Scouts.
This experience proved to be invaluable. Upon completion of
her internship, Jaime chose to continue on at RUMFS and transitioned
to the position of marine field technician. |
| Donations to the Stacy Moore Hagan
Scholarship, to help fund an annual internship at RUMFS for
Future Marine Scientists, are welcome and very much appreciated.
For more information go to www.caringbridge.org/nj/stacyhagan
|
- Allison Franzese, Christine Theodore, Tali Babila, Paul Field,
Silke Severmann and Rob Sherrell, members of the inorganic chemistry
group, participated in the first Geotraces Intercalibration Cruise
on the R/V Knorr, for which Rob was a co-PI. You can get more
info from Rob (or Christine) or at
http://www.geotraces.org/.
- Ken Able is quoted in the 7/22/08 New York Times on the presence
of an increasing number of jellyfish in the region. To read the
story by Nate Schweber and Sharon Otterman go to http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/22/nyregion/22jellyfish.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=jellyfish+&st=nyt&oref=slogin
- On July 22, 2008, a news story about the Rutgers' gliders appeared
on TVE Internacional. The channel is carried by the Spanish-language
tier of
DirecTV and by some Time Warner cable systems around the U.S.
To view the story by Rosa Mollo, click on http://www.rtve.es/mediateca/videos/20080722/robot-estudiara-calidad-del-agua-del-oceano-atlantico/228802.shtml?s1=noticias&s2=&s3=
- Follow the journey of the RU glider "Scarlet Knight "
by going on the new Scarlet Knight webpage http://rucool.marine.rutgers.edu/atlantic/
- Thomas Grothues, Assistant Research Professor at the Rutgers
University Marine Field Station, and REMUS are in the news! "Fishing
for a dead zone" by Robert Morris of MyrtleBeachOnline.com
and "Underwater
robots search for answers to save marine life" by Rashad
Midani of WBTW News 13 report on the use of REMUS to dissect a
low oxygen zone off the South Carolina coast. The work was funded
by South Carolina Sea Grant and the National Undersea Research
Program (NURP).
- Alan Robock gave the following presentations:
- June 13, 2008 on "Climatic consequences of nuclear
conflict," to U.S. House of Representatives Congressional
staff, sponsored by AAAS Center for Science, Technology and
Security Policy
- June 17, 2008 on "Climatic consequences of nuclear
conflict," Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
- July 2, 2008, lecture on global warming to SEBS Educational
Opportunity Fund-Office of Special Programs Summer Institute
2008, to about 70 students
Meetings Attended
- Allison Franzese served as a co-chair for Session 17f: Geochemical
Tracers of Past Ocean Circulation at the 18th Annual V.M. Goldschmidt
Conference, Goldschmidt 2008 - "from Sea to Sky" held
in Vancouver, Canada. Allison also presented a poster entitled
"Strontium isotopes in detrital sediments constrain the glacial
position of the Agulhas Retroflection" with S.R. Hemming
and S.L. Goldstein.
New Grants
- Able, K. Stockton State College, "Is the Presence of the
Invasive Swim-Bladder Parasite Anguillicola Crassus Influencing
Eel Recruitment?" 02/01/08-01/31/09, ($11,655)
- Curchitser, E. North Pacific Research Board, "Recruitment
Mechanism for Tanner Crabs in the Easter Bering Sea." 08/01/08-08/31/10,
($69,916)
Publications
- Castelao, R., O. Schofield, S. Glenn, R. Chant, and J. Kohut.
2008. Cross-shelf transport of freshwater on the New Jersey shelf,
Journal Geophysical Research, 113, C07017, doi:10.1029/2007JC004241.
- Geyer, W.R., R. Chant, and R. Houghton. 2008. Tidal and spring-neap
variations in horizontal dispersion in a partially mixed estuary,
J. Geophys. Res., 113, C07023, doi:10.1029/2007JC004644.
- Haag, S.M., M.J. Kennish, and G.P. Sakowicz. 2008. Seagrass
habitat characterization in estuarine waters of the Jacques Cousteau
National Estuarine Research Reserve using underwater videographic
imaging techniques. Journal of Coastal Research, SI 55:171-185.
- Hagan, S.M. and K.W. Able. 2008. Diel variation in the pelagic
fish assemblage in a temperate estuary. Estuaries and Coasts
31:33-42.
- Kennish, M.J. 2008. Research and monitoring in a nationally
integrated network of NERRS sites. Journal of Coastal Research,
SI 55:236-239.
- Kennish, M.J. (editor). 2008. Research and monitoring of NERRS
aquatic ecosystems. Journal of Coastal Research, Special Issue
No. 55, 240 pp.
- Kennish, M.J., S.M. Haag, and G.P. Sakowicz. 2008. Seagrass
demographic and spatial habitat characterization in Little Egg
Harbor, New Jersey, using fixed transects. Journal of Coastal
Research, SI 55:148-170.
- Mills, H. J., E. Hunter, M. Humphrys, L. Kerkhof, L.. McGuinness,
M. Huettel, J.E. Kostka. 2008. Characterization of nitrifying,
denitrifying, and overall bacterial communities in permeable marine
sediments of the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Applied and
Environmental Biology. doi:10.1128/AEM.02692-07 74(14): 4440-4453.
- Mills, K., M.J. Kennish, and K.A. Moore. 2008. Research and
monitoring components of the National Estuarine Research Reserve
System. Journal of Coastal Research, SI 55:1-8.
- Nelson, J.D., S.E. Boehme, C.E. Reimers, R.M. Sherrell, L.J.
Kerkhof. 2008. Temporal patterns of microbial community structure
in the Mid-Atlantic Bight. FEMs Microbial Ecology. DOI:10.1111/j.1574-6941.2008.00553.
- Robock, A. 2008: Climate effects of nuclear war. Chapter 3.4
in Global Politics in a Changing World, Fourth Edition, Richard
W. Mansbach and Edward Rhodes, Eds., Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,
New York, 96-99.
- Robock, A. 2008. The value of thoroughly evaluating geoengineering
schemes. Bull. Atomic Scientists, Roundtable discussion,
http://www.thebulletin.org/web-edition/roundtables/has-the-time-come-geoengineering
- Rona, P. 2008. The changing vision of marine minerals. Oregeology
Reviews 33: 618-666.
- Sackett, D.K., K.W. Able and T.M. Grothues. 2008. Habitat dynamics
of summer flounder, Paralichthys dentatus, within a shallow USA
estuary, based on multiple approaches using acoustic telemetry.
Marine Ecology Progress Series 364:199-212.
- Subramaniam, A., P.L. Yager, E.J. Carpenter, C.Mahaffey, K.
Bjorkman, S. Cooley, A.B. Kustka, J.P. Montoya, S.A. Sanudo-Wilhelmy,
R. Shipe, D.G. Capone. 2008. Amazon river enhances diazotrophy
and carbon sequestration in the tropical North Atlantic Ocean.
Proceedings National Academy of Sciences. 105(30): 10460-10465.
- Wuenschel, M.J. and K.W. Able. 2008. Swimming ability of eels
(Anguilla rostrata, Conger oceanicus) at estuarine ingress: contrasting
patterns of cross-shelf transport? Marine Biology 154:775-786.
Student News
- On August 1, 2008, Alex Kahl (Graduate Program in Oceanography)
successfully defended his Ph.D. dissertation, “Phytoplankton
Physiology and Export Flux.” Committee members were Oscar
Schofield (advisor), Paul Falkowski, Bob Chant, Richard Ludescher,
Zoe Finkel(Mount Allison University), and Hans Dam (University
of Connecticut).
- Matt Oliver, former Ph.D. student of Oscar Schofield and currently
at the University of Delaware, was awarded the NASA New Investigator
Award in Earth Science. Congratulations Matt! To learn more, click
here
or on link http://www.udel.edu/PR/UDaily/2009/jul/nasa070208.html
- Lora Smith (John Reinfelder, advisor) successfully defended
her doctoral dissertation, "Land-Atmosphere Exchange of Mercury
in Temperate Wetlands" on July 2, 2008. She will begin work
at EPA Region II in New York in August.
- Graduate student Ben Kravitz (Alan Robock, advisor) attended
the Advanced Study Program Summer Colloquium on Numerical Techniques
for Global Atmospheric Models at the National Center for Atmospheric
Research, Boulder, Colorado, June 1-13, 2008. For a photo of the
attendees, see http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cms/pel/asp2008/group_photo.jpg
Ben was admitted to this competitive program and all his expenses
were paid.
| RIOS Summer Interns, 2008 |

(Back, lf to rt) Lindsay d'Ambrosio
(Ammerman), Caitlin Kennedy (Albe/Grothues), Andrea Zasoski
(Ramey, J. Grassle), Jessica Lynn Hoffman (Able), Madeline
Schroth-Miller (Chant/Ramey), Olga Korenovska (Bidle), Brian
Reckenbeil (Able/Grothues), Jessica Kurth (Kennish), Eric
Vowinkel (Glenn), and Phyllis Ko (Seitzinger/Altieri/Perri),
(Bottom, lt to rt) Frances Buderman (Taghon), Amanda Devillers
(Taghon). Absent from photo are Alex Pogue (Albe/Grothues),
and Chris Huch (Kennish).
|
|
|
2008 Summer RIOS Poster Presentation and
Contest |
|
| |
|
| Pictures courtesy of Igor Heifetz |
Madeline Schroth-Miller (Ctr), Winner
of the 2008 Summer RIOS Poster Presentation and Contest |
|
| This year’s internship
program (June 1-August 8) offered a summer research experience
to 14 students who were the successful applicants from colleges
and universities all over the USA. After a shared field experience
at the Rutgers University Marine Field Station at Tuckerton
in the first week, the students worked with individual research
mentors on their own projects and presented their results
to the IMCS and wider community in a poster session on August
8. All of these posters can be viewed at the RIOS website
http://marine.rutgers.edu/rios/students.htm.
In the poster contest (the judges were John Dighton, Janice
McDonnell, and Karl Nordstrom) the winner was Maddie Schroth-Miller,
California Polytechnic State University, who was mentored
by Patricia Ramey and Bob Chant. Her poster was titled “Long-term
variability in surfclam recruitment in relation to climate
and local physical factors”. The runner-up was Franny
Buderman, Cornell University, for her study titled “Effect
of pier shading on prey fish in the Hudson River, using dual
frequency identification sonar”. Franny’s mentors
were Motz Grothues and Ken Able. The winning poster will be
presented by Maddie Schroth-Miller at the AGU meeting in San
Francisco in December, 2008. The RIOS program is largely supported
by an REU grant from the National Science Foundation (Gary
Taghon and Ken Able, Co-PIs), with additional support from
NOAA and IMCS. Thanks are due to the RIOS students and their
research mentors, the two teaching mentors (Joan Pravatiner
and Kristen Ross), and the IMCS staff who contributed to an
exciting and fruitful summer.
|
Let's Welcome
- Dr.Trond Kristiansen is currently a visiting scholar at IMCS,
as part of his Post-Doc at the Institute of Marine Research in
Bergen in Norway. He recently moved to Rutgers after working one
year as a Post-Doc with Dr. Werner in North Carolina. His work
focuses on the use of coupled physical and biological models in
fisheries oceanography. He uses an individual-based model coupled
with the ROMS model to explore and understand the various mechanisms
that determine successful growth and survival through the early
pelagic life stages of Atlantic cod. This model system enables
them to model larval feeding, growth, behavior, dispersal, and
survival, under various environmental settings at the spawning
and nursery grounds along the coast of northern Norway and at
Georges Bank on the eastern coast of USA. (Old Blake room 103)
- Dr Silke Severmann joined the faculty of IMCS as Assistant Professor
this summer. Her position is jointly with the Department of Earth
and Planetary Sciences. Silke received her M.Sc. and Ph.D. from
the School of Ocean and Earth Science at the National Oceanography
Centre in Southampton, UK, where she studied Mediterranean sapropels
as well as hydrothermal metalliferous deposits from the mid-Atlantic
ridge. Following a postdoc in the Department of Geology &
Geophysics at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, her most recent
appointment was as a Research Associate in the Department of Earth
Sciences at the University of California - Riverside. Silke's
research interests are in the cycling of metals, nutrients, carbon
and sulfur as they relate to the Earth's biogeochemical evolution.
To this effect she studies chemical and isotopic tracers in the
ocean, lakes and rivers to gain a better understanding how the
interactions between physical, chemical and biological processes
are recorded in modern sediments and ancient sedimentary rocks.
In particular, Silke has made significant contributions to the
development of "heavy" stable isotopes, such as Fe and
Mo, as new paleo-proxies. The development of a diverse range of
paleo-proxies and their ground-truthing in appropriate modern
is key to unravelling the geological record of the evolving ocean
and atmosphere, and the early evolution of life.
The metallic blue 1968 VW bug, which you will occasionally see
in the parking lot, came all the way from California with her,
and if you can teach her how to do a proper tuning, feel free
to contact her in room 305A or extension 236.
|