December 2020

Special Issue on Understanding the Effects of Offshore Wind Energy Development on Fisheries

Oceanography | Vol.33, No.4

ON THE COVER

Constructed in 2015–2016, Block Island Wind Farm

off the coast of Rhode Island was the first commercial

offshore wind farm in the United States. It provided

an opportunity to begin to understand the potential

effects of such development on coastal resources in

the US Atlantic, a focus of several articles in this special

issue. Photo credit: Ørsted

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SPECIAL ISSUE SPONSOR

Support for this special issue was provided by

the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s

Office of Renewable Energy Programs and

the U.S. Department of Energy’s Wind Energy

Technology Office in the Office of Energy

Efficiency and Renewable Energy.

Neither the United States Government nor any

agency thereof, nor any of their employees,

makes any warranty, express or implied, or

assumes any legal liability or responsibility for

the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of

any information. The views and opinions of

authors expressed herein do not necessarily

state or reflect those of the United States

Government or any agency thereof.

SPECIAL ISSUE GUEST EDITORS

Emily Twigg, The National Academies of

Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine

Susan Roberts, The National Academies of

Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine

Eileen Hofmann, Old Dominion University

Oceanography

THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHY SOCIETY

VOL.33, NO.4, DECEMBER 2020

SPECIAL ISSUE ON

UNDERSTANDING

THE EFFECTS

OF OFFSHORE

WIND ENERGY

DEVELOPMENT

ON FISHERIES

DEPARTMENTS

05

QUARTERDECK. A Decade of Career Profiles: Recommendations

for Job-Hunting

By E.S. Kappel

07

FROM THE PRESIDENT. Looking Back into the Future: Ocean Sciences

Post 2030

By M. Visbeck

09

COMMENTARY. Fostering Global Science Networks in a

Post-COVID-19 World

By A.J. Hobday, C. Robinson, E.J. Murphy, A. Newton, M. Glaser, and S. Brodie

11

RIPPLE MARKS. Lovely, Dark, and Deep: Forests Behind the Tide

By C.L. Dybas

128 WORKSHOP REPORT. Leveraging Design Principles to Inform the

Next Generation of NASA Earth Satellites

By J.P. Scott and E. Urquhart

130 THE OCEANOGRAPHY CLASSROOM. How to Teach Motivating and

Hands-On Laboratory and Field Courses in a Virtual Setting

By M.J. Glessmer

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The Oceanography Society

thanks the following for

their time, dedication, and

valuable contributions to

the organization.

Alan Mix

Past President

Magdalena Andres

Physical Oceanography

Charles Greene

Biological Oceanography

Carolyn Scheurle

Education

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