Oceanography | September 2019
Oceanography
THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHY SOCIETY
VOL.32, NO.3, SEPTEMBER 2019
SPECIAL ISSUE ON PISCO
PARTNERSHIP FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY
STUDIES OF COASTAL OCEANS
Oceanography | Vol.32, No.3
Oceanography | September 2019
contents
VOL. 32, NO. 3, SEPTEMBER 2019
12
FROM THE GUEST EDITORS. Introduction to the Special Issue on PISCO:
Partnership for Interdisciplinary Studies of Coastal Oceans
By H.M. Leslie, M. Ruckelshaus, and J.D. Witman
16
PISCO: Advances Made Through the Formation of a Large-Scale,
Long-Term Consortium for Integrated Understanding of Coastal
Ecosystem Dynamics
By B.A. Menge, K. Milligan, J.E. Caselle, J.A. Barth, C.A. Blanchette, M.H. Carr,
F. Chan, R.K. Cowen, M. Denny, S.D. Gaines, G.E. Hofmann, K.J. Kroeker,
J. Lubchenco, M.A. McManus, M. Novak, S.R. Palumbi, P.T. Raimondi, G.N. Somero,
R.R. Warner, L. Washburn, and J.W. White
26
Quantitative Biogeography: Large-Scale, Long-Term Change in the Rocky
Intertidal Region of the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem
By P.T. Raimondi, C.M. Miner, B.A. Menge, C.A. Blanchette, and D.P. Lohse
38
Integrating Coastal Oceanic and Benthic Ecological Approaches for
Understanding Large-Scale Meta-Ecosystem Dynamics
By B.A. Menge, J.E. Caselle, K. Milligan, S.A. Gravem, T.C. Gouhier, J.W. White,
J.A. Barth, C.A. Blanchette, M.H. Carr, F. Chan, J. Lubchenco, M.A. McManus,
M. Novak, P.T. Raimondi, and L. Washburn
50
Connectivity, Dispersal, and Recruitment: Connecting Benthic
Communities and the Coastal Ocean
By J.W. White, M.H. Carr, J.E. Caselle, L. Washburn, C.B. Woodson, S.R. Palumbi,
P.M. Carlson, R.R. Warner, B.A. Menge, J.A. Barth, C.A. Blanchette, P.T. Raimondi,
and K. Milligan
60
SIDEBAR | Empirical Approaches to Measure Connectivity
By J.W. White, M.H. Carr, J.E. Caselle, S.R. Palumbi, R.R. Warner, B.A. Menge,
and K. Milligan
62
The Dynamics and Impact of Ocean Acidification and Hypoxia:
Insights from Sustained Investigations in the Northern California
Current Large Marine Ecosystem
By F. Chan, J.A. Barth, K.J. Kroeker, J. Lubchenco, and B.A. Menge
72
Community Responses to Climate-Related Variability and Disease:
The Critical Importance of Long-Term Research
By B.A. Menge, J.E. Caselle, J.A. Barth, C.A. Blanchette, M.H. Carr, F. Chan,
S. Gravem, T.C. Gouhier, J. Lubchenco, M.A. McManus, K. Milligan, M. Novak,
P.T. Raimondi, L. Washburn, and J.W. White
82
Present and Future Adaptation of Marine Species Assemblages:
DNA-Based Insights into Climate Change from Studies of Physiology,
Genomics, and Evolution
By S.R. Palumbi, T.G. Evans, M.H. Pespeni, and G.N. Somero
SPECIAL ISSUE ON PISCO:
PARTNERSHIP FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES OF COASTAL OCEANS
16
Oceanography | September 2019
72
38
62
Oceanography | Vol.32, No.3
A
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SPECIAL ISSUE SPONSORS
Production of this issue of Oceanography was
supported by core funding from the David and
Lucile Packard Foundation to the Partnership for
Interdisciplinary Studies of Coastal Oceans.
SPECIAL ISSUE GUEST EDITORS
• HEATHER M. LESLIE, Darling Marine Center &
School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine
• MARY RUCKELSHAUS, Stanford University
• JON D. WITMAN, Brown University
ON THE COVER
The Partnership for Interdisciplinary Studies of Coastal Oceans (PISCO)
is dedicated to understanding coastal processes in the California
Current Large Marine Ecosystem. Consortium research aims to quantify
intertidal and subtidal biogeographic patterns of community structure
and ecological subsidies, create a mooring network to document
inner-shelf oceanic conditions, and conduct coordinated, coast-wide
experiments that evaluate variation in ecological processes. (1) Copper
rockfish, Sebastes caurinus, (2) researchers in the rocky intertidal
zone, (3) Spanish shawl nudibranch, Flabellinopsis iodinea, (4) diver
conducting kelp forest surveys, (5) purple urchins, Strongylocentrotus
purpuratus, and (6) oceanographers deploying instruments. Credits:
Photos 1, 4, and 5: Katie Davis. Photo 2: Heather Fulton-Bennett.
Photo 3: Chris Honeyman. Photo 6: Michael Moses.
94
94
Marine Protected Areas Exemplify the Evolution of Science and Policy
By M.H. Carr, J.W. White, E. Saarman, J. Lubchenco, K. Milligan, and J.E. Caselle
104 SIDEBAR | The Science of Marine Reserves: A Series of Booklets and
Graphics Connecting Science, Public Understanding, and Policy
By K. Grorud-Colvert, J. Lubchenco, S. Airamé, M. Pessino, and S.D. Gaines
106 Connecting Science to Policymakers, Managers, and Citizens
By J. Lubchenco, B.A. Menge, J.A. Barth, M.H. Carr, J.E. Caselle, F. Chan,
H.K. Fulton-Bennett, S.D. Gaines, K.J. Kroeker, K. Milligan, S.R. Palumbi,
and J.W. White
116 Planning for Change: Assessing the Potential Role of Marine Protected
Areas and Fisheries Management Approaches for Resilience
Management in a Changing Ocean
By K.J. Kroeker, M.H. Carr, P.T. Raimondi, J.E. Caselle, L. Washburn, S.R. Palumbi,
J.A. Barth, F. Chan, B.A. Menge, K. Milligan, M. Novak, and J.W. White
REGULAR ISSUE FEATURE
126 Oleander is More Than a Flower: Twenty-Five Years of Oceanography
Aboard a Merchant Vessel
By T. Rossby, C.N. Flagg, K. Donohue, S. Fontana, R. Curry, M. Andres, and J. Forsyth
138 SIDEBAR | Submesoscale Dynamics Inferred from Oleander Data
By J. Callies
140 SIDEBAR | Acoustic Backscatter Patterns
By J. Palter, L. Cook, A. Gonçalves Neto, S. Nickford, and D. Bianchi
DEPARTMENTS
05
QUARTERDECK. Ten Years of Career Profiles
By E.S. Kappel
06
FROM THE PRESIDENT. From Knowledge to Value: Connecting the Boxes
By M. Visbeck
10
RIPPLE MARKS. The DNA They Leave Behind: In a Drop of Water,
New Answers to Questions About Marine Species
By C.L. Dybas
142 THE OCEANOGRAPHY CLASSROOM. How (Not) to Run an
Oceanography Field Course
By S. Boxall
144 BOOK REVIEW. Vast Expanses: A History of the Oceans
Reviewed by I. Brosnan
146 CAREER PROFILES. Sherry Lippiatt, California Regional Coordinator,
NOAA Marine Debris Program/IM Systems Group • Holly Rolls, Owner,
Senior Instructor, and Guide, Happy Paddler Kayak Tours & EcoVentures
Oceanography | Vol.32, No.3
Depth (km)
126
Oceanography
THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHY SOCIETY
VOL.32, NO.3, SEPTEMBER 2019
SPECIAL ISSUE ON PISCO
PARTNERSHIP FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY
STUDIES OF COASTAL OCEANS
Oceanography | September 2019
EDITOR
Ellen S. Kappel
Geosciences Professional
Services Inc.
t: (1) 301-229-2709
ekappel@geo-prose.com
ASSISTANT EDITOR
Vicky Cullen
t: (1) 508-548-1027
vcullen@whoi.edu
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Cheryl Lyn Dybas
cheryl.lyn.dybas@gmail.com
DESIGN/PRODUCTION
Johanna Adams
johanna-adams@cox.net
Oceanography
https://tos.org/oceanography
Oceanography contains peer-reviewed articles that chronicle all aspects of
ocean science and its applications. The journal presents significant research,
noteworthy achievements, exciting new technology, and articles that address
public policy and education and how they are affected by science and tech-
nology. The overall goal of Oceanography is cross-disciplinary communica-
tion in the ocean sciences.
Oceanography (ISSN 1042-8275) is published by The Oceanography Society,
1 Research Court, Suite 450, Rockville, MD 20850 USA. Oceanography arti-
cles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution, and repro-
duction in any medium or format as long as users cite the materials appro-
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changes that were made to the original content. Third-party material used
in articles are included in the Creative Commons license unless indicated
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Jennifer Ramarui at info@tos.org for further information.
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Claudia Benitez-Nelson
University of South Carolina
cbnelson@geol.sc.edu
Ian Brosnan
NASA Ames Research Center
ian.g.brosnan@nasa.gov
Grace Chang
Integral Consulting Inc.
gchang@integral-corp.com
Margaret L. (Peggy) Delaney
University of California, Santa Cruz
delaney@ucsc.edu
Philip N. Froelich
Duke University
froelich@magnet.fsu.edu
Charles H. Greene
Cornell University
chg2@cornell.edu
William Smyth
Oregon State University
smyth@coas.oregonstate.edu
Kiyoshi Suyehiro
Yokohama Institute for Earth
Sciences, JAMSTEC
suyehiro@jamstec.go.jp
Peter Wadhams
University of Cambridge
p.wadhams@damtp.cam.ac.uk
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ing of oceanography, facilitates consensus building
across all the disciplines of the field, and informs the
public about ocean research, innovative technology,
and educational opportunities throughout the spec-
trum of oceanographic inquiry.
OFFICERS
PRESIDENT: Martin Visbeck
PRESIDENT-ELECT: Andone Lavery
PAST-PRESIDENT: Alan C. Mix
SECRETARY: Allison Miller
TREASURER: Susan Banahan
COUNCILORS
AT-LARGE: Richard Crout
APPLIED TECHNOLOGY: James Girton
BIOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Charles H. Greene
CHEMICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Peter Sedwick
EDUCATION: Carolyn Scheurle
GEOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Amelia Shevenell
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Oceanography | September 2019
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Oceanography | September 2019
Oceanography Student News
https://tos.org/opportunities
QUARTERDECK
Seen in Oceanography
True Colors of
Oceanography
Guidelines for Effective and Accurate
Colormap Selection
By Kristen M. Thyng et al.
…wherever color is used to represent
numerical values, its role transitions from
a mere aesthetic nicety to carrying the
responsibility of conveying data honestly
and accurately.
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.66
Send Us Your Feedback!
Have questions or comments for the Student Rep?
Interested in being a highlighted student?
Want to share your best career tips and tricks?
We need your input!
» studentrep@tos.org and @fishy_chrissy
Follow Us
The Oceanography Society
@TOSOceanography
@TOSOceanography
Oceanography
Number 22 – March 15, 2019
STUDENT NEWS
TOS Student Highlight
ISAIAH MILTON. I am a third-year marine and environmental science major work-
ing toward my Bachelor of Science degree at Hampton University. I became enam-
ored with marine biology in middle school after the father of a friend of mine came in
to talk about his occupation. He works for NOAA and he was studying marine mammals and how we
affect their migration. I do not remember every detail, but I do know that he sparked my perpetually
growing interest in studying the marine science.
When I was accepted to Hampton University in 2016, I did not know all of the things I was getting
myself into for the next four years. This department has offered me so many academic and research
opportunities, and connections with people and programs that have significantly changed my life
for the better. I had enlightening and inspiring summer research experiences because of this depart-
ment. I have done research in the Maryland Coastal Bays on Blue Crabs and the bacteria infecting
them through the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, and I have scuba dived on the coral reefs of
Mo’orea, French Polynesia, through the Diversity Project at UCLA.
After completing these research projects, I was able to attend the ASLO conference through the
ASLO Multicultural Program (ASLOMP) two years in a row to present my research. I have made great
connections that have pushed me to pursue my PhD after I graduate. I am so grateful for the experi-
ences I have had in the past three years here at Hampton and in the field of marine science.
tos.org
Ocean Sciences Meeting 2020
Call for Input
Camille Pagniello is the TOS Student Rep-
resentative on the 2020 Ocean Sciences
Meeting Planning Committee. She and
her counterparts from AGU and ASLO are
building upon experiences from the 2018
OSM to create exciting events for next
year’s meeting. Ideas from TOS student
members are welcome, please send them
to Camille at cpagniel@ucsd.edu.
31 Tips for Thriving in
Graduate School (the last 7)
From https://graduateschool.vt.edu/
about/deanscorner/tips-for-thriving.html
25. Laughter is good for you. And so is
keeping a good sense of humor.
26. Goals are important for progress.
Set long term and short term goals.
Review regularly.
27. Don’t write a script about things to
come. Be attentive as the journey
unfolds and follow.
28. You might not have all the information
you need or want. It is OK to ask
questions. Ask!
29. Learn through active listening
and observing. Also, look for the
“unobvious.”
30. (originally the last one): Change
rhetoric and reality from surviving to
thriving in graduate school. Shared
responsibility. Please join.
31. It’s hard to thrive without a mentor.
Find at least one, maybe more
than one.
From the Rep
Self-assessment and
comparison.
How do we know if we’re
doing “enough”? If we’ll finish on time? If
we’ll be competitive on the job market?
I’m a fourth-year PhD student, and I
just submitted my first lead-author paper.
For the first three years, I was so sensitive
to my classmates submitting papers—it
felt like everyone around me was building
their resumes, and I wasn’t.
The wonderful flexibility that we have in
research comes at a price—we must learn
how to assess ourselves. We (with the help
of advisors and collaborators) decide when
the project is ready for submission. We
(mostly) decide how many hours we work,
and when, and where. Throughout our
schooling, we are assessed using grades,
which can largely be relative to our class-
mates. It makes absolutely perfect sense
that we use our classmates as yardsticks
against which to measure our effort and
productivity.
The reality, though, is that no two proj-
ects can be compared. Once we’ve been
doing this science thing long enough, we’ll
know intuitively that each project moves at
its own pace. Sometimes it takes months to
perfect a laboratory technique, and other
times we are able to do a new analysis with
pre-existing data. I think a lot of our anxiet-
ies in graduate school are normal “growing
pains” as scientists, and I’ll talk more about
that next month.
I’d love to hear from you about how you
deal with self-assessment—write to me at
chernandez@whoi.edu or @fishy_chrissy
on Twitter and Instagram!
— Chrissy
Have You Read...?
From academia to industry: Seven tips
for scientists making the leap. Crystal
Romeo Upperman shares her advice after
moving out of the lab and into the private
sector. Nature, https://doi.org/10.1038/
d41586-019-00692-y
True Colors of
Oceanography
Guidelines for Effective and Accurate
Colormap Selection
Seen in Oceanography
WAVE NAVIGATION IN
THE MARSHALL ISLANDS
Comparing Indigenous and Western
Scientific Knowledge of the Ocean
By Joseph Genz et al.
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2009.52
WE NEED
YOUR INPUT!
Help Freshen
Your TOS Resources
Web Page
https://tos.org/opportunities
Have you used the Graduate Student/
Early Career Resources pages on the TOS
website? If so, tell us what you like about
it. If some types of resources are missing
that you’d like to have, please let us know
that, too. This page is for you. Help us
keep it fresh and useful. Send all ideas to
Jenny at jenny@tos.org.
Send Us Your Feedback!
Have questions or comments for the Student Rep?
Interested in being a highlighted student?
Want to share your best career tips and tricks?
We need your input!
» studentrep@tos.org and @fishy_chrissy
Follow Us
The Oceanography Society
@TOSOceanography
@TOSOceanography
Oceanography
Number 23 – April 18, 2019
STUDENT NEWS
TOS Student Highlight
NANA KAMIYA. I’m a third-year PhD engineering student at Kyoto University. I am
investigating subduction zones using paleo-geothermal analyses and rock mechan-
ics experiments. As an undergraduate, I majored in geology and conducted struc-
tural geology fieldwork on land. For my PhD, I am concentrating on engineering aspects of geology,
performing consolidation tests. Rock engineering can inform different geological processes, thus
pursuing studies in the engineering department is very interesting and worthwhile for me.
When I was a second-year master’s student, I joined International Ocean Discovery Program
Expedition 370, Temperature Limit of the Deep Biosphere off Muroto, as a physical properties spe-
cialist. The two-month expedition was aboard Chikyu, the Japanese scientific drilling vessel that is
capable of penetrating deep below the seafloor. The science party was composed of microbiologists,
geochemists, sedimentologists, and physical properties specialists. We probed the temperature of
limit of life by exploring the combined geological structure, chemical environment, and population
of microbes as revealed through drilling. This experience was very exciting. I found that the field of
geology is like a house of microbes! The combined geology and microbiology discussions made me
see geology in a whole new way.
Combining the knowledge gained from samples collected from both land and beneath the sea is
important for understanding subduction zones. Until now, I have mainly analyzed on-land samples,
but the active subduction zone is located in the ocean. I look forward to doing some more marine
geology based on my experiences on Chikyu.
tos.org
More Resources
Conversations with Women of Color
in STEM: #Vanguard STEM
https://www.vanguardstem.com/show-content/
Try an episode of this live, monthly web-
series featuring a rotating panel of women
of color in STEM discussing a wide variety
of topics including their research interests,
wisdom, advice, tips, tricks and commen-
tary on current events.
From the Rep
Growing Pains
Did anyone else have really
bad growing pains as a kid?
I remember in elementary school that my
shins hurt so badly, just because I was
growing. I hadn’t done anything to cause
it, and there wasn’t really anything to do
except wait for it to get easier.
This is how I’ve started to think about
my stress and anxiety in graduate school.
First of all, I think that most people in their
twenties have these feelings. In some
ways, grad school is like your first job—it’s
a roughly five-year contract, and both
you and your supervisors are feeling out
whether it’s a good fit for you. In nearly
any first job, there is a big learning curve;
there’s wondering if you’re learning it
fast enough or doing it well enough, and
there’s worrying if it’s even what you want
to be doing.
There might be some ways to ease this
stress and uncertainty, but mostly it just
abates with time. You have to keep walk-
ing, writing, culturing bacteria, building
instruments, analyzing data, whatever it
is…and one day you look around and real-
ize you’re a scientist. We should certainly
work to reduce the types of stresses that
stem from systemic societal issues, but we
shouldn’t fear the growing pains. If you’re
reading this, you’re doing great—trust the
process and keep going.
I’d love to hear what you think—write
to me at chernandez@whoi.edu or @fishy_
chrissy on Twitter and Instagram!
— Chrissy
Have You Heard?
WorkLife with Adam Grant
https://www.ted.com/series/worklife_with_
adam_grant
You may want to check out this podcast.
Titles include:
» How to love criticism
» Become friends with your rivals
» Networking for people who hate
networking
» And more
Hello PhD
http://hellophd.com/
Or, how about this podcast? Titles include:
» How to give a perfect poster presentation
» The secret life of pets (in grad school)
» Conference like the pros
» Plus many, many more
Seen in Oceanography
THE MICROBIAL LOOP
By Lawrence R. Pomeroy, et al.
Methods and concepts to explore
the significance of microbes in the
ocean’s web of life.
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2007.45
Tell Us What You Think About
the Career Profiles Page
https://tos.org/career-profiles
Oceanography has now been publishing
“career profiles” for almost a decade. We
profile ocean scientists who have careers
outside of academia. The idea for this col-
umn came from you —graduate students.
• Is 10 years enough? Shall we discontinue
this column after December 2019?
• Are we asking the right questions?
• Are we profiling the types of careers
you’d like to hear about?
• Is there some other column you’d rather
us publish?
Please send your ideas and comments
to Oceanography Editor Ellen Kappel at
ekappel@geo-prose.com.
Send Us Your Feedback!
Have questions or comments for the Student Rep?
Interested in being a highlighted student?
Want to share your best career tips and tricks?
We need your input!
» studentrep@tos.org and @fishy_chrissy
Follow Us
The Oceanography Society
@TOSOceanography
@TOSOceanography
Oceanography
Number 24 – May 15, 2019
STUDENT NEWS
TOS Student Highlight
THOMAS MORROW. Here’s my history in a headline: “Florida man moves to Idaho
to study seafloor structure and tectonics.” I am a PhD candidate at the University of
Idaho, with a BS in geology from the University of Florida. Despite my efforts to move
further inland, I study oceanic lithosphere rheology, deformation, and tectonics thanks to inclusive
approaches to data sharing, open access repositories, and telepresence-enabled cruises.
Most data I work with (e.g., bathymetry, satellite gravity measurements) are from openly available
compilations such as the Global Seafloor Fabric and Magnetic Lineation Database and the Global
Multi-Resolution Topography Data Synthesis. One of the most frustrating experiences I’ve had as
a graduate student is waiting years for another researcher to share their observations, even after
publication or embargoes end. Certainly, scientists that collect observations deserve the first oppor-
tunity to publish their findings, but once this information is out, they should share data as openly
as possible.
I recently participated via telepresence in a NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer cruise to the Pacific
Ocean. Immediately after, I added newly collected bathymetry soundings to a manuscript while the
Okeanos Explorer crew sent the data on to their open access archive. Competition for funding and
ship time have often been limiting factors in my graduate school experience, but open access data,
like the GSFML and GMRT compilations, and telepresence-enabled cruises, like the Okeanos Explorer
program, remedy these constraints and make our research communities more inclusive. They allow
students—regardless of where they live—to publish compelling results, even when they can’t easily
access field opportunities or analytical facilities.
tos.org
Mental Health Resources
• Psychology Today. Find a therapist
using this listing of mental health profes-
sionals. https://www.psychologytoday.
com/us/therapists
• Mental Health in the Sciences. Nature
series offering stories and advice on
how to maintain good mental health in
the hyper-competitive science environ-
ment. https://www.nature.com/articles/
d41586-018-04998-1
• PhDepression. Support and resources
for PhDs, post-grads, and grad students.
https://www.thephdepression.com/
From the Rep
It’s the 70th Annual
Mental Health Month!
Since 1949, Mental Health
America has highlighted the importance
of mental health in May. This year’s theme
focuses on the value of animal compan-
ionship, spirituality, humor, and social
connectedness. There are some great
resources on their website (http://www.
mentalhealthamerica.net/may).
Mental health isn’t something that
matters only for people who have been
diagnosed with mental health disorders.
Mental health encompasses how any indi-
vidual handles their feelings—stress, grief,
anger, and also happiness. It is about how
we deal with life, including health, relation-
ships, and work difficulties. Ultimately, tak-
ing care of our mental health will prevent
us from burning out.
Tending to our mental health is per-
sonal and multi-faceted. For me, a thera-
pist is absolutely essential. For most of us,
strong connections to a support network
is required. Some folks have medication as
part of their toolkit. Others rely on regular
exercise, spending time with friends or
family, cuddling with their pet, watching
their favorite Netflix shows, and not check-
ing their email from home.
Building a toolkit doesn’t mean you
won’t have bad days, but your bad days
will be a lot less likely to turn into bad
weeks, months, or years. Resilience, not
perfection, is the goal—and resilience is
about how you bounce back, not whether
you stumble.
Be kind to yourself. Value your mental
health. Set the boundaries you need. Try
out some new habits. Or, you know, take
a day off from holding perfectly to your
habits. And if you’re struggling, maybe try
reaching out to a friend, mentor, or your
campus mental health office.
— Chrissy
Have You Read?
Three Tips for Giving a Great Talk
» Tip No. 1: Find a central focus
» Tip No. 2: Get the details right
» Tip No. 3: Present clearly
Read the full article in Science: https://doi.
org/ 10.1126/science.caredit.aax7352
Have you read the latest issue of Oceanography Student News?
Each newsletter includes a regular column by the student
representative to the TOS Council, profiles of TOS student members,
information about student activities related to TOS-sponsored
meetings, and links to relevant student resources and articles
in Oceanography magazine. Feel free to forward the links to the
newsletters to other students, or print out a copy and post it on your
department bulletin board. Any questions? Email TOS Student Rep
Chrissy Hernández at studentrep@tos.org.
TEN YEARS OF
CAREER PROFILES
Graduate Student and
Early Career Resources
https://tos.org/opportunities
The Oceanography Society’s portal contains information
on jobs, fellowships, scholarships, and ship time/fieldwork
opportunities, as well as links to useful articles. New resources
are added regularly, so please be sure visit this site often!
It’s hard to believe that Oceanography is coming up on its
tenth anniversary of publishing “career profiles.” Since
2010, ocean scientists, generally two per issue of the mag-
azine, have been sharing their stories about how they
came to their careers outside of academia, what their work
entails, and advice on how to seek jobs (see pages 146–148
in this issue for the September 2019 contributions and also
https://tos.org/career-profiles for the complete set). While
the career profiles page is consistently one of the most
viewed on The Oceanography Society website, after pub-
lishing 80 profiles by the end of this calendar year, describ-
ing a wide variety of career paths, it’s time to assess whether
we should continue this column or find some other useful
way to use the space in the magazine to address graduate
student and early career information needs.
We initiated the career profiles column following a dis-
cussion among graduate students at the Ocean Sciences
Meeting a decade ago that was brought to my attention.
I’d like the space in Oceanography to remain student and
early career focused. If you like the career profiles col-
umn and want us to continue it, please drop me a note
at ekappel@geo-prose.com to tell me so and include any
suggestions you might have as to how we might improve
it. We haven’t changed the basic list of questions we ask
the people we profile since the inception of the column. If
you think it’s time for Oceanography to try something else
in that space, what might that be? Think creatively, talk
among yourselves, and please let me know.
Ellen S. Kappel, Editor
Oceanography | Vol.32, No.3
FROM KNOWLEDGE TO VALUE
CONNECTING THE BOXES
OCEAN
SCIENCE
SOCIETY
Scientifc Enterprise
Societal Value
Modeling
and Projections
Assessment
Policy and
Governance
Discovery and
Observing
Understanding
FIGURE 1. The ocean value cycle.
Ocean science is producing data, under-
standing, and information—but are we
maximizing their uptake and use across
all ocean-related communities? Are we
making the most of the impact ocean
knowledge can have on society?
In thinking about the social contract
between science and society, I found it
helpful to draw a diagram that I call the
“ocean value cycle” (Figure 1). It con-
nects the flow of information and ques-
tions among five activities. Activities
related to ocean discovery and observ-
ing, improved ocean system understand-
ing, and the generation of predictions and
scenario development are often the focus
of research groups located at ocean sci-
ence laboratories or in university depart-
ments. Ocean assessment benefits from
the information generated by the research
enterprise and can inform societal actors
in the policy, governmental, or private
sectors. However, very often significant
uncertainties or impediments to action
raise new science questions that moti-
vate new discovery or improved obser-
vation, deeper system understanding, or
improved predictions. The value cycle
never ends.
What are the key elements of my pro-
posed ocean value cycle?
1. Ocean Discovery and Observing
The vast volume of the ocean and its
complex coastlines may never be fully
observed nor adequately understood.
The deep sea in particular is an exciting
frontier. Many discoveries in this realm
are being made today, and we can expect
more in the years to come. Sometimes
internationally coordinated teams can
reveal new areas of our planet, new phe-
nomena of profound importance, or new
organisms and substances. Sustained and
systematic ocean observing can doc-
ument ocean changes, provide critical
information to initialize ocean system
models, and provide essential data that
will improve ocean understanding.
2. Ocean Understanding
The ocean is a very complex and con-
nected global system. For centuries,
ocean scientists have been trying to
understand ocean dynamics, chemis-
try, biology, and ecosystems, as well as
the geology of the seafloor and meteorol-
ogy above the ocean. Internationally, sev-
eral project teams are conducting innova-
tive and coordinated research to improve
ocean understanding and the interactions
among the various systems.
3. Ocean Modeling and Projections
Ocean system models often focus on
specific challenges such as the physi-
cal climate, ocean biogeochemistry, the
sediment- ocean interface, coastal regions,
or fisheries. Near-real-time ocean pre-
diction to inform safe navigation, warn
coastal communities of imminent threats,
or enable seasonal climate forecasting are
well-established activities in many parts
of the world. Population increase, eco-
nomic wealth, and an increasing human
footprint on the environment will cause
more profound changes in the future,
raising the question: How will the ocean
change in the Anthropocene? What
effects will climate change, increasing
fishing, coastal development, and grow-
ing levels of environmental pollution
have on the ocean in the next 20, 50, 100,
and 200 years? These future ocean sce-
narios are also slowly emerging.
FROM THE PRESIDENT
Oceanography | September 2019
4. Ocean Assessment
Ocean observation and ocean system
modeling lead to new scientific under-
standing. In order for the societal system
to react, there is a need for issue- specific
ocean assessment. The ocean’s role in
the climate system is part of the well-
established climate assessment, notably
in work of the IPCC (Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change), while changes
in marine biodiversity are increasingly
covered by the IPBES (Intergovernmental
Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity
and Ecosystem Services) process. At
the UN level, the First World Ocean
Assessment
was
released
in
2016.
However, no assessment exists today that
covers all aspects of the ocean domain,
a gap that should be closed in order to
improve ocean governance to support the
sustainable development agenda.
5. Ocean Policy and Governance
The legal regime of the ocean and coastal
zone is complex. And the connectivity of
the world ocean though its global circu-
lation pattern means that ocean gover-
nance will yield the best outcome when
it is regionally or globally coherent.
Authority, transparency, and the abil-
ity to encourage good behavior are par-
ticular challenging in the ocean domain.
Equitable access, burden, and benefit
sharing as well as transnational cooper-
ation warrant innovative approaches to
ocean governance. New ocean policies or
governance options often require deeper
insights and more precise ocean infor-
mation. This need can be addressed by
an improved and fit-for-purpose ocean
observing system, better ocean under-
standing, and more accurate predic-
tions or scenarios of future ocean and
climate change.
In some form, the value chain described
above is implemented in most parts of
the world. However, the information flow
across the interfaces is not always opti-
mal. Barriers between different commu-
nities, limited data flows and data system
connectivity, and use restriction can lead
to disconnects in the value chain. Who
is to blame? Society for not articulating
clearly what it wants? The science enter-
prise that only wants to answer its own
questions? Language and data flow barri-
ers? I see many opportunities to improve
how we act as an ocean sciences commu-
nity. My wish is that we all be more aware
of those who can use our information and
knowledge and reach out to them to dis-
cuss how to bridge gaps. We also could be
more aware of the questions that others
might have that are applicable to our field
of expertise and engage in broader dis-
cussions about future priorities.
Finally, a fully connected ocean value
cycle could enable a whole range of inno-
vative and new ocean solutions. They
could inform stakeholders and decision-
makers about options in the context of
sustainable development of the marine
sphere. Areas such as sustainable fish-
eries,
least
destructive
exploration,
renewable energy, effective and equita-
ble marine spatial planning, marine car-
bon management, transparent gover-
nance, and sustainable tourism are just
some examples of ocean solutions for a
more sustainable world. The connection
between ocean science and sustainable
development will be further advanced
during the upcoming Decade of Ocean
Science for Sustainable Development
(2021–2030). More information about
the Ocean Decade can be found on its
website (https://oceandecade.org) and
in Visbeck (2018).
Ocean science knowledge can provide
societal value at local, regional, and global
scales. It can provide answers to questions
about future increases in pressures on the
ocean system. It can also inform disas-
ter risk reduction actions, improve resil-
ience of the ocean ecosystem to shocks,
and safeguard coastal communities from
ocean-related threats. Finally, ocean sci-
ence knowledge can be used to increase
human prosperity today and for future
generations if ocean resources are used
in a sustainable and equitable way. The
Oceanography Society, together with its
international partners and programs, can
make a big difference to the generation
of ocean value by doubling our efforts to
communicate with our friends and part-
ners in areas that are related to ocean sci-
ence as well as with other societal actors.
Martin Visbeck, TOS President
REFERENCE
Visbeck, M. 2018. Ocean science research
is key for a sustainable future. Nature
Communications 9(1):690, https://doi.org/10.1038/
s41467-018-03158-3.
Oceanography | Vol.32, No.3
THE OCEANOGRAPHY SOCIETY’S
HONORS PROGRAM
One of the most meaningful aspects of being a member
of The Oceanography Society (TOS) is the opportunity
to recognize and celebrate our colleagues’ outstanding
accomplishments. In support of this goal, the TOS Council
is excited to announce the significantly enhanced TOS
Honors Program. Please take this opportunity to recognize
a colleague, mentor, peer, or student for their outstanding
achievements and contributions to the ocean sciences.
Learn more at https://tos.org/honors.