Using Integrated Ecosystem Observations from Gulf Watch Alaska to Assess the Effects of the 2014/2015 Pacific Warm Anomaly in the Northern Gulf of Alaska

Kris Holderied, National Centers of Coastal Ocean Science, National Ocean Service, Kasitsna Bay Laboratory, Homer, AK, United States, Tammy Hoem Neher, NOAA Kasitsna Bay Laboratory, Molly McCammon, Alaska Ocean Observing System, Anchorage, AK, United States, Katrina Hoffman, PWS Science Center, Cordova, AK, United States, Russell R Hopcroft, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK, United States, Mandy Lindeberg, NOAA NMFS, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, Juneau, AK, United States, Brenda Ballachey, U.S.Geological Survey (retired), Heather A Coletti, National Park Service Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK, United States, Dan Esler, USGS Alaska Science Center, AK, United States, Thomas Weingartner, University of Alaska Fairbanks, College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, Fairbanks, AK, United States and Gulf Watch Alaska Program
Abstract:
The response of nearshore and coastal pelagic ecosystems in the northern Gulf of Alaska to the 2014-2015 Pacific Ocean warm anomaly is being assessed with multi-disciplinary observations of the Gulf Watch Alaska long-term ecosystem monitoring program. Gulf Watch Alaska is an integrated, multi-agency program, funded by the Exxon Valdez oil spill Trustee Council to track populations of nearshore and pelagic species injured by the 1989 oil spill, as well as the marine conditions that affect those species. While the primary program goals are to support management and sustained recovery of species injured directly and indirectly by the spill, the integration of oceanographic observations with monitoring of nearshore and pelagic food webs also facilitates detection and assessment of ecosystem changes. The initial 5-year phase of the Gulf Watch Alaska program was started in 2012 and has provided marine ecosystem observations through the transition in late 2013 from anomalously cool to anomalously warm ocean conditions in the Gulf of Alaska. We review results from and linkages between oceanographic, whale, seabird, intertidal, and plankton monitoring projects in Prince William Sound, Cook Inlet and the northern Gulf of Alaska shelf. We also assess the different ecosystem responses observed between the summers of 2014 and 2015, with the region experiencing unusual amounts of seabird and marine mammal mortalities and harmful algal bloom events in 2015.