Bering Sea Ecosystem Study (BEST)-Bering Sea Integrated Ecosystem Research Program (BSIERP)

June 14 - July 15, 2009 | R/V Knorr, Bering Sea

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  • Teacher
  • Mark McKay
  • Venture Academy/Delta VISTA
  • Stockton, CA

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Who is on the expedition?Who is on the expedition?
Who is on the expedition?

Mark McKay currently teaches marine science, biology, AP environmental science, GIS, and forensics in a science and technology charter school he helped found two years ago. Prior to this challenge, he developed analytical instrumentation used in energy production and coordinated a grant providing science teacher training in rural and small school districts. Mr. McKay's students are heavily involved in competitions and field research projects in the Gulf of Farallones National Marine Sanctuary and the Mokelumne River watershed, replacing invasive plant species with native plants and working to restore the river in order to increase salmon runs. In his spare time, Mr. McKay teaches other teachers and administrators, breeds tropical fish, scuba dives, competes in martial arts, and is completing a second masters degree. Mr. McKay feels he has the greatest job in the world, because he does real science with students who are interested and engaged, and he is looking forward to bringing more authentic science and oceanography to his students from his PolarTREC expedition. Mr. McKay's particpation in PolarTREC is supported in part by the NOAA Teacher at Sea program.

Raymond Sambrotto is the chief scientist on this Bering Sea Ecosystem Study cruise and studies marine plankton ecology and global nutrient cycles. Dr. Sambrotto has worked from small boats in the Caribbean to major oceanographic programs in the Arabian Sea. He has worked extensively at both poles using icebreakers and submarines to traverse these difficult environments. An important part of Dr. Sambrotto's research is determining how marine populations will fare under changed climate conditions and how these changes will affect the larger global environment.

What are they doing?What are they doing?
What are they doing?

A diverse research team aboard the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter (USCGS) Healy will conduct sampling along a series of transects over the eastern Bering Sea. Research on the ship is multidisciplinary, with scientists using a variety of techniques to document ocean conditions and the productivity of the Bering Sea ecosystem. Researchers measure the temperature, salinity, and nutrient content of the sea water and the concentration of nutrients used and released by phytoplankton. They also conduct surveys of zooplankton, fish, seabirds, and marine mammals such as walrus and seal to assess the health of these populations.

These measurements will give scientists an indication of the current status of the Bering Sea ecosystem and any changes that might affect the use of its resources, and the economic, social, and cultural sustainability of the people who depend on it. This is the third 2009 cruise in support of the Bering Sea Ecosystem Study (BEST) and the Bering Sea Integrated Ecosystem Research Program (BSIERP).

Where are they?Where are they?
Where are they?

The team will travel aboard the R/V Knorr, a U.S. Navy vessel operated by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the Bering Sea. The Bering Sea lies to the west of Alaska and to the east of Russia. The team will depart from and return to the port of Dutch Harbor, Alaska, a small community in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska. The R/V Knorr is best known as the ship that supported a team of researchers in 1985 as they discovered the wreck of the RMS Titanic.

Project VocabularyProject Vocabulary

Climate

The average weather over a particular region of the Earth. Climate originates in recurring weather phenomenon that result from specific types of atmospheric circulation.

Icebreaker

An icebreaker is a special purpose ship or boat designed to move and navigate through ice-covered waters.

Phytoplankton

Small or microscopic aquatic plants that float or drift in fresh or salt water.

Plankton

Plankton are small or microscopic organisms that float or drift in fresh or salt water, especially at or near the surface, and serve as food for fish and other larger organisms.

Zooplankton

Small or microscopic aquatic animals that float or drift in fresh or salt water.

View all PolarTREC Vocabulary Terms