MODELING PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY IN THE MARGIN ICE ZONE FROM GLIDER-BASED MEASUREMENTS OF CHLOROPHYLL AND LIGHT DURING THE 2014 MIZ PROGRAM

Mary Jane Perry1, Craig Lee2, Luc Rainville2, Ivona Cetinic3, Eun Jin Yang4 and Sung-Ho Kang4, (1)University of Maine, Orono, ME, United States, (2)University of Washington, Applied Physics Laboratory, Seattle, WA, United States, (3)NASA Goddard Space Flight Center/USRA, Ocean Ecology Laboratory, Greenbelt, MD, United States, (4)KOPRI Korea Polar Research Institute, Incheon, Korea, Republic of (South)
Abstract:
In late summer 2014 during the Marginal Ice Zone (MIZ) Experiment, an international project sponsored by ONR, four Seagliders transited open water, through the marginal ice zone, and under ice-covered regions in the Beaufort Sea, penetrating as far as 100 km into the ice pack. The gliders navigated either by GPS in open water or, when under the ice, by acoustics from sound sources embedded in the MIZ autonomous observing array. The glider sensor suite included temperature, temperature microstructure, salinity, oxygen, chlorophyll fluorescence, optical backscatter, and multi-spectral downwelling irradiance. Cruises on the IBRV Araon operating in the open Beaufort Sea and on the R/V Ukpik and Norseman operating in continental shelf waters off Alaska’s north slope allowed us to construct proxy libraries for converting chlorophyll fluorescence to chlorophyll concentration and optical backscatter to particulate organic carbon concentration. Water samples were collected for chlorophyll and particulate organic carbon analysis on the cruises and aligned with optical profiles of fluorescence and backscatter using sensors that were factory calibrated at the same time as the glider sensors. Fields of chlorophyll, particulate organic carbon, light, and primary productivity are constructed from the glider data. Productivity is modeled as a function of chlorophyll and light, using photosynthesis-light (PE) models with available PE parameters from Arctic measurements. During August the region under the ice was characterized by a deep chlorophyll maximum layer with low rates of production in overlying waters. A phytoplankton bloom developed in open water at the end of September, preceding the rapid reformation of ice, despite shorter days and reduce irradiation.