October 2023

Special Issue on the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory: 50 Years of Innovative Research in Oceanography

Oceanography | Vol. 36, No. 2–3

86 SIDEBAR. Advancing Observational Infrastructure in the Arctic

By S. Stalin, S. Bell, N. Delich, C.W. Mordy, P.J. Stabeno, H.M. Tabisola, and D. Tagawa

88 Arctic Research at PMEL: From Sea Ice to the Stratosphere

By M. Wang and J. Overland

94 Progress of Fisheries-Oceanography Coordinated Investigations in the

Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Passes

By C.W. Mordy, N.A. Bond, E.D. Cokelet, A. Deary, E. Lemagie, P. Proctor, P.J. Stabeno,

H.M. Tabisola, T. Van Pelt, and E. Wisegarver

101 Applications of Biophysical Modeling to Pacific High-Latitude Ecosystems

By A.J. Hermann, W. Cheng, P.J. Stabeno, D.J. Pilcher, K.A. Kearney, and K.K. Holsman

109 SPOTLIGHT. Monitoring Biodiversity Impacts of a Changing Arctic through

Environmental DNA

By M.P. Galaska, S.D. Brown, and S.M. McAllister

114 SPOTLIGHT. REVAMP: Rapid Exploration and Visualization through an

Automated Metabarcoding Pipeline

By S.M. McAllister, C. Paight, E.L. Norton, and M.P. Galaska

120 Acidification of the Global Surface Ocean: What We Have Learned

from Observations

By R.A. Feely, L.-Q. Jiang, R. Wanninkhof, B.R. Carter, S.R. Alin, N. Bednaršek,

and C.E. Cosca

130 Global Synthesis of the Status and Trends of Ocean Acidification Impacts

on Shelled Pteropods

By N. Bednaršek, R.A. Feely, G. Pelletier, and F. Desmet

138 Evaluating the Evolving Ocean Acidification Risk to Dungeness Crab: Time-

Series Observations and Modeling on the Olympic Coast, Washington, USA

By S.R. Alin, S.A. Siedlecki, H. Berger, R.A. Feely, J.E. Waddell, B.R. Carter, J.A. Newton,

E.J. Schumacker, and D. Ayres

148 Emerging Applications of Longstanding Autonomous Ocean Carbon

Observations

By A.J. Sutton and C.L. Sabine

ON THE COVER

The cover illustration depicts many of the technologies that support research

at the NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL). (1) Saildrone.

(2) Ecosystems & Fisheries Oceanography (FOCI) mooring. (3) NASA’s Orbiting

Carbon Observatory-2 satellite. (4) Wave Glider. (5) NOAA Ship Ronald H. Brown.

(6) DART mooring acoustically linked to a (14) Bottom Pressure Recorder

and a (12) profiling crawler, or Prawler, on the mooring line. (7) Papa mooring.

(8) Tropical moored buoy. (9) Argo float. (10) Oculus glider. (11) NOAA remotely

operated vehicle Deep Discoverer. (13)  Hydrophone. (15) CTD-rosette with a

(16) Miniature Autonomous Plume Recorder (MAPR) on the wire. Communications

satellites (not shown) relay ocean data from many of these platforms to PMEL.

Background map by Google Earth.

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Oceanography | Vol. 36, No. 2–3

SEATTLE

NEWPORT

Oceanography

THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHY SOCIETY

VOL. 36, NO. 2–3, OCTOBER 2023

PACIFIC MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL LABORATORY

50 YEARS OF INNOVATIVE RESEARCH IN OCEANOGRAPHY

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SPECIAL ISSUE GUEST EDITORS

• Richard Feely

• Eddie Bernard

• Stephen Hammond

• Michelle McClure

• Michael McPhaden

• Phyllis Stabeno

• Diane Stanitski

• Chidong Zhang

SPECIAL ISSUE SPONSOR

Support for this issue was provided by the

NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory.

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