Expanding Alaska’s Remote Ocean Observing Capabilities Using Robotic Gliders and Remote Sensing Technologies

Carol Janzen1, Molly McCammon1, Peter Winsor2, David J Murphy3, Jeremy T Mathis4, Mark Baumgartner5, Kathleen Stafford6, Hank Statscewich2, Wiley Evans7 and Rachel A Potter8, (1)Alaska Ocean Observing System, Anchorage, AK, United States, (2)University of Alaska Fairbanks, College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, Fairbanks, AK, United States, (3)Seabird Electronics Inc, Bellevue, WA, United States, (4)NOAA Seattle, Seattle, WA, United States, (5)Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Biology Department, Woods Hole, MA, United States, (6)Applied Physics Laboratory University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States, (7)Hakai Institute, Campbell River, BC, Canada, (8)Univ of AK-Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK, United States
Abstract:
The Alaska Ocean Observing System (AOOS) is directed by Congress to facilitate, implement and support ocean observing for the entire coast of Alaska, working with federal, state, local and private sector partners. However, developing an integrated ocean observing system at high latitudes presents unique challenges. In addition to the harsh environment, the region covered by AOOS is made up of nearly 44,000 miles of coastline, larger than the marine systems in the rest of the United States combined. No other observing system in the United States has such climate extremes, significant geographic distances, and limited observing infrastructure. Making use of robotic technologies in Alaskan waters has been successfully demonstrated with the pilot deployment of a real-time marine mammal detection system deployed on a Slocum buoyancy controlled glider. The glider also carries payload to measure high resolution temperature and salinity data. With these simultaneous data streams, scientists are investigating how marine mammal occurrences are related to water column conditions and mixing fronts, as well as comparing northern versus southern Chukchi community composition, inshore (Alaska Coastal Current) waters, and offshore (Bering Sea) waters. In its third year, the glider is now equipped with lithium batteries that allow it to operate unattended for an entire Arctic summer season, whereas past deployments were limited to about 10 days. Developing and applying such cutting edge, long-endurance autonomous technology is benefitting others monitoring in Arctic regions where shipboard access is not only expensive, but limited to fair weather conditions during the openwater (ice free) seasons of summer to early fall.