Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Temperature anomaly o C Ice concentration
2
Impacts of Climate Variations on the Bering Sea Ecosystem Overarching theme: Describing the state of the Bering Sea, and using this information for inter-disciplinary and multi-institution studies
4
Temperature and fluorescence at Sites 2 (left) and 4 (right)
5
Depth-Averaged Temperature in the SE Bering Sea
6
Vertically Averaged Temperature (°C) at Site 2
7
Grey - Lowest 1/3 Pink - Middle 1/3 Red - Highest 1/3 1965 1975 1985 1995 Bering Sea Climate Indices
9
Bering Sea Pollock
10
Pollock and Bottom Temperature 0 0 0 2 2 4 0.0 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.0 Relative CPUE 170 o W 170 165 160 o W 60 o N 58 o N 60 o N 58 o N J Ianelli
11
Hunt et al., 2002 Oscillating Control Hypothesis
12
Pollock Recruitment with Summer Wind Mixing & Winter Surface Temperature 1978199619821989
13
Produced from NOAA/PMEL’s Bering Sea Climate Theme Page
16
St. Paul St. George Northern fur seal pups born on Pribilof Islands Error bars are 95% confidence intervals http://nmml.afsc.noaa.gov/alaskaecosystems/nfshome/survey2004pribpups.htm
17
[M. Webber-USFWS] Walrus herd in the Chukchi Sea– June 2002 Schematic of food web in the northern Bering and Chukchi Seas [Grebmeier and Dunton 2000] Clam food in walrus stomachs [photos courtesy G. Sheffield]
18
850 mb Temperature: 1-January-1975 Bering Sea Arctic North Pacific Bering Climate Cold/Dry Arctic Air vs. Warm/Moist Pacific Air
19
Mooring Sites 4 2 5
20
Final Remarks Present - Can often go beyond exploratory correlative analysis to scenario testing based on induction. Near Future - Continue monitoring and process studies to refine quantitative understanding of mechanisms.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.