December 2019

Special Issue on FLEAT: Flow Encountering Abrupt Topography

Oceanography | December 2019

THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHY SOCIETY

VOL.32, NO.4, DECEMBER 2019

Oceanography

SPECIAL ISSUE ON

FLEAT: Flow

Encountering Abrupt

Topography

Oceanography | Vol.32, No.4

VOL. 32, NO. 4, DECEMBER 2019

Oceanography | December 2019

contents

VOL. 32, NO. 4, DECEMBER 2019

10

INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL ISSUE. FLEAT: A Multiscale

Observational and Modeling Program to Understand How Topography

Affects Flows in the Western North Pacific

By T.M.S. Johnston, M.C. Schönau, T. Paluszkiewicz, J.A. MacKinnon, B.K. Arbic,

P.L. Colin, M.H. Alford, M. Andres, L. Centurioni, H.C. Graber, K.R. Helfrich,

V. Hormann, P.F.J. Lermusiaux, R.C. Musgrave, B.S. Powell, B. Qiu, D.L. Rudnick,

H.L. Simmons, L. St. Laurent, E.J. Terrill, D.S. Trossman, G. Voet, H.W. Wijesekera,

and K.L. Zeiden

22

Nonlinear Short-Term Upper Ocean Circulation Variability in the

Tropical Western Pacific

By B. Qiu, S. Chen, B.S. Powell, P.L. Colin, D.L. Rudnick, and M.C. Schönau

32

The End of an El Niño: A View from Palau

By M.C. Schönau, H.W. Wijesekera, W.J. Teague, P.L. Colin, G. Gopalakrishnan,

D.L. Rudnick, B.D. Cornuelle, Z.R. Hallock, and D.W. Wang

46

Eddies, Topography, and the Abyssal Flow by the Kyushu-Palau Ridge

Near Velasco Reef

By M. Andres, M. Siegelman, V. Hormann, R.C. Musgrave, S.T. Merrifield,

D.L. Rudnick, M.A. Merrifield, M.H. Alford, G. Voet, H.W. Wijesekera, J.A. MacKinnon,

L. Centurioni, J.D. Nash, and E.J. Terrill

56

Typhoon-Forced Waves Around a Western Pacific Island Nation

By S.T. Merrifield, T.A. Schramek, S. Celona, A.B. Villas Bôas, P.L. Colin, and E.J. Terrill

66

Understanding Vorticity Caused by Flow Passing an Island

By D.L. Rudnick, K.L. Zeiden, C.Y. Ou, T.M.S. Johnston, J.A. MacKinnon, M.H. Alford,

and G. Voet

74

Observations of Near-Inertial Surface Currents at Palau

By M. Siegelman, M.A. Merrifield, E. Firing, J.A. MacKinnon, M.H. Alford, G. Voet,

H.W. Wijesekera, T.A. Schramek, K.L. Zeiden, and E.J. Terrill

84

Dynamical Downscaling of Equatorial Flow Response to Palau

By H.L. Simmons, B.S. Powell, S.T. Merrifield, S.E. Zedler, and P.L. Colin

92

Island Wakes Observed from High-Frequency Current Mapping Radar

By S.T. Merrifield, P.L. Colin, T. Cook, C. Garcia-Moreno, J.A. MacKinnon, M. Otero,

T.A. Schramek, M. Siegelman, H.L. Simmons, and E.J. Terrill

102 Turbulence and Vorticity in the Wake of Palau

By L. St. Laurent, T. Ijichi, S.T. Merrifield, J. Shapiro, and H.L. Simmons

110 Energy and Momentum Lost to Wake Eddies and Lee Waves Generated

by the North Equatorial Current and Tidal Flows at Peleliu, Palau

By T.M.S. Johnston, J.A. MacKinnon, P.L. Colin, P.J. Haley Jr., P.F.J. Lermusiaux,

A.J. Lucas, M.A. Merrifield, S.T. Merrifield, C. Mirabito, J.D. Nash, C.Y. Ou,

M. Siegelman, E.J. Terrill, and A.F. Waterhouse

126 Palau’s Effects on Regional-Scale Ocean Circulation

By G. Gopalakrishnan and B.D. Cornuelle

136 Energy Transfer in the Western Tropical Pacific

By S.E. Zedler, B.S. Powell, B. Qiu, and D.L. Rudnick

SPECIAL ISSUE ON

FLEAT: FLOW ENCOUNTERING ABRUPT TOPOGRAPHY

10

110

46

84

Oceanography | December 2019

Oceanography | Vol.32, No.4

A

CONTACT US

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SPECIAL ISSUE GUEST EDITORS

• T.M. SHAUN JOHNSTON

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

• THERESA PALUSZKIEWICZ

Octopus Ocean Consulting LLC

• MARTHA SCHÖNAU

Applied Ocean Sciences

• LOUIS ST. LAURENT

University of Washington

ON THE COVER

The microstructure glider used for turbulent wake studies is in

the foreground, with Pat Colin aboard the Coral Reef Research

Foundation’s catamaran Kemedukl in the background. Photo

credit: Steve Lindfield, CRRF. Bottom left: Mika Siegelman

(University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa) cradling a conductivity

and temperature recorder that is covered with gooseneck

barnacles. Photo credit: Kristin Zeiden, Scripps Institution

of Oceanography. Middle: Shoreline of Palau. Photo credit:

Hans C. Graber, University of Miami. Right: Simulation of the

eddying currents surrounding the islands of the Republic of

Palau, showing salinity (color) and velocity at 400 m resolution

(see Harper et al., 2019, in this issue for model details). Image

credit: Harper Simmons, University of Alaska Fairbanks

146

174

Oceanography | Vol.32, No.4

146 Connecting Process Models of Topographic Wave Drag to Global Eddying

General Circulation Models

By B.K. Arbic, O.B. Fringer, J.M. Klymak, F.T. Mayer, D.S. Trossman, and P. Zhu

156 Tropical Western Pacific Thermal Structure and its Relationship to

Ocean Surface Variables: A Numerical State Estimate and Forereef

Temperature Records

By T.A. Schramek, B.D. Cornuelle, G. Gopalakrishnan, P.L. Colin, S.J. Rowley,

M.A. Merrifield, and E.J. Terrill

164 Ngaraard Pinnacle, Palau: An Undersea “Island” in the Flow

By P.L. Colin, T.M.S. Johnston, J.A. MacKinnon, C.Y. Ou, D.L. Rudnick, E.J. Terrill,

S.J. Lindfield, and H. Batchelor

174 Radar Observations of Ocean Surface Features Resulting from

Underwater Topography Changes

By L. Nyman, B. Lund, H.C. Graber, R. Romeiser, and J. Horstmann

184 Flow-Topography Interactions in the Samoan Passage

By J.B. Girton, J.B. Mickett, Z. Zhao, M.H. Alford, G. Voet, J.M. Cusack, G.S. Carter,

K.A. Pearson-Potts, L.J. Pratt, S. Tan, and J.M. Klymak

194 A Spatial Geography of Abyssal Turbulent Mixing in the Samoan Passage

By G.S. Carter, G. Voet, M.H. Alford, J.B. Girton, J.B. Mickett, J.M. Klymak, L.J. Pratt,

K.A. Pearson-Potts, J.M. Cusack, and S. Tan

DEPARTMENTS

05

QUARTERDECK. Talking to Local Communities About Climate Change

By E.S. Kappel

06

FROM THE PRESIDENT. Observing the Ocean: From Niche to Norm

By M. Visbeck

08

RIPPLE MARKS. Bioluminescent, Biofluorescent Species Light the Way

to New Biomedical Discoveries

By C.L. Dybas

204 THE OCEANOGRAPHY CLASSROOM. How to Help Your Students Ask

More and Better Questions

By M. Zrada, K.A. Kastens, and M. Turrin

207 BOOK REVIEW. Ocean Outbreak: Confronting the Rising Tide of

Marine Disease

Reviewed by T.M. Hill

209 BOOK REVIEW. The Outlaw Ocean: Journeys Across the Last

Untamed Frontier

Reviewed by D.J. Baker

211 CAREER PROFILES. Marley Jarvis, Outreach and Education Specialist,

Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences, University of Washington

Oceanography | December 2019

EDITOR

Ellen S. Kappel

Geosciences Professional

Services Inc.

ekappel@geo-prose.com

ASSISTANT EDITOR

Vicky Cullen

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-

priately, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate the

changes that were made to the original content. Third-party material used

in articles are included in the Creative Commons license unless indicated

otherwise in a credit line to the material. If the material is not included in

the article’s Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission

directly from the license holder to reproduce the material. Please contact

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

The Oceanography Society was founded in 1988 to

advance oceanographic research, technology, and

education, and to disseminate knowledge of ocean-

ography and its application through research and

education. TOS promotes the broad understand-

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

PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Magdalena Andres

STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE: Christina Hernández

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

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Oceanography | December 2019

Oceanography | Vol.32, No.4

OCEANOGRAPHY

COMING TO OCEANOGRAPHY IN MARCH 2020. Oceanography guest

editors Melissa Omand and Emmanuel Boss are seeking contributions to

DIY Oceanography. In this new section, contributing authors share all of the

relevant information on a homemade sensor or instrument so that others can

build, or build upon, it. The short articles will also showcase how this technol-

ogy was used successfully in the field. Contributions should include a list of

the materials and costs, instructions on how to build, and any blueprints and

codes (those could be deposited elsewhere). See Oceanography’s Author

Guidelines page (https://tos.org/oceanography/guidelines) for detailed infor-

mation on submission requirements.

CALL

FOR

CONTRIBUTIONS

The deadline for the TOS Council

Election is January 31, 2020.

Voting in this election is an important

function of membership. The persons

elected will participate in directing the

affairs and determining the future of

the Society.

A message has been sent to all TOS

members with instructions on voting.

If you have not received the election

email, please contact Jenny Ramarui at

jenny@tos.org.

TOS COUNCIL

ELECTION

March 2020

MULTI-TOPIC ISSUE

June 2020

PALEOCEANOGRAPHY:

LESSONS FOR A

CHANGING WORLD

September 2020

MARINE BIODIVERSITY

OBSERVATION NETWORK:

AN OBSERVING SYSTEM

FOR LIFE IN THE SEA

December 2020

ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS

OF OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY

DEVELOPMENT

March 2021

GoMRI:

GULF OF MEXICO OIL SPILL

& ECOSYSTEM SCIENCE

2010–2020

https://tos.org/oceanography

Oceanography

UPCOMING

Oceanography Style Now

Available for EndNote

We are pleased to announce that the

Oceanography citation style is now

available for download from EndNote.

Please go to the EndNote web page

https://endnote.com/

and search on “oceanography”

NEW!!!

SPECIAL ISSUES

Oceanography | December 2019

The ocean influences weather and climate by storing solar radiation

and distributing heat and moisture around the globe.

Talking to Local Communities

About Climate Change

As science issues become increasingly important in political and pol-

icy debates, it is more important than ever before for scientists to com-

municate effectively outside the literal and figurative walls of our own

communities. In October, I got my opportunity to do just that when I

gave a presentation on climate change to attorneys at a Maryland law

firm as part of their “continuing legal education” series. Although I’m

not a climate scientist, when the invitation arrived I wasn’t deterred

from accepting. I was confident the Internet contained enough

information—in particular, simple explanatory graphics—for me to

construct an informative talk.

I wasn’t disappointed. There was no perfect one-click download,

but US federal and state agencies post a gargantuan amount of infor-

mation about the causes and consequences of climate change on their

websites. Much of the information is aimed directly at educating the

public, and much of it is really quite good. The great challenge was to

cull the trove of information into a 45-minute talk. I began by cov-

ering the workings of the global climate system, and then added a

Maryland twist about how global trends translate into problems

facing local communities, especially those located along the Atlantic

Ocean and in nearby low-lying areas. Not surprisingly, land use and

community association lawyers whose clients (or the clients’ insurers)

worry about future flooding, erosion, and storm intensity were among

those most engaged by the presentation, but everyone in the room

knew someone whose property is threatened by sea level rise.

Based on my experience, I suggest that our community consider

offering a simple and well-designed set of slides and talking points

about climate change that can be downloaded from The Oceanography

Society website. The presentation would enable any informed per-

son to give a talk on climate change to a small, local group without

expending a huge amount of effort. The overarching slide set would

provide the big picture of how the global climate system works, with

a focus on the ocean’s role in it, along with some of the large-scale

consequences of global warming. We could perhaps develop add-on

slides aimed at specific audiences such as lawyers, real estate develop-

ers, or local businesses, or designed to address specific regional issues

such as sea level rise or fisheries.

We all know that climate change touches almost every corner of

our physical and economic environments, but it was gratifying to see

how other professions are anxious to be educated so that they can give

the best possible advice about how to adapt, adjust, and cope.

Ellen S. Kappel, Editor

Global Climate Change

What Can We Expect for Maryland?

Water rescues along the Clara Barton Parkway,

July 2019. Photo credit: Pete Piringer, Montgomery

County Fire & Rescue Service

Sea Level is Rising

Credit: NOAA

Credit: https://climatechange.maryland.gov/science/

Saltwater Intrusion

As sea levels rise, more

agricultural fields will be

inundated with saltwater on

Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

Photo Credit: Severn Smith (TNC)

Warm ocean

waters provide

the energy to fuel

storm systems.

Image Credit: NASA’s Earth Observatory/

LANCE MODIS Rapid Response Team

Projections of future

climate over the

United States suggest

that the recent trend

toward increased

heavy precipitation

events will continue.

The map shows percent increases in the

amount of precipitation falling in very heavy

events from 1958 to 2012.

»

Source: globalchange.gov

Projections of future

climate over the

United States suggest

that the recent trend

toward increased

heavy precipitation

events will continue.

The map shows percent increases in the

amount of precipitation falling in very heavy

events from 1958 to 2012.

»

Source: globalchange.gov

FROM THE PRESIDENT

Oceanography | Vol.32, No.4

EVERY 10 YEARS, the ocean observing community gets

together to take stock of what we have accomplished, where the

new opportunities might be, and what innovation and improved

collaboration could bring. The third such community-driven

conference—OceanObs’19—convened in Honolulu, Hawaii, on

September 16–20. Once again, it brought together people from

all over the world to communicate the decadal advances made

in ocean observing technologies and the remarkable science that

observing networks have enabled—and to chart innovative solu-

tions to society’s growing needs for ocean information and ways

in which collaborations can accelerate progress.

But how did we get there?

Looking back at the first conference, OceanObs’99, held

October 17–22 in Saint Raphaël, France, it was a galvaniz-

ing force for the 300 attendees who all had interests in ocean

observations and climate. That conference benefited from the

just completed World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE),

which highlighted the acute need to collect data from the ocean

more regularly and systematically in order to document its role

in the climate system, to provide the data needed for emerging

seasonal to interannual forecasting, and to improve understand-

ing of ocean dynamics. Very quickly, this first OceanObs confer-

ence provided significant input into the rapidly growing Global

Ocean Observing System (GOOS). The Intergovernmental

Oceanographic Commission (IOC) created GOOS in 1991 in

response to calls from the Second World Climate Conference

(Geneva, 1990). The creation of GOOS was also spurred by the

desire of many nations to gather the information required to

improve forecasts of climate change, the management of marine

resources, the mitigation of the risks of natural disasters, and the

use and protection of the coastal zone and coastal ocean.

Ten years later, OceanObs’09, held September 21–25 in

Venice, Italy, brought together more than 600 scientists to build

a common vision for the acquisition of routine and sustained

global information on the marine environment sufficient to

meet society’s needs for describing, understanding, and fore-

casting marine and climate variability and weather; sustainably

managing living marine resources; and assessing longer-term

trends. The community attending the conference expanded

from largely physical oceanographers and carbon chemists in

1999 to include biogeochemists and biologists in 2009. One of

the conference’s most significant outcomes was the development

of the Framework for Ocean Observing. The Framework pro-

vides guidance in the implementation of an integrated and sus-

tained ocean observing system. It uses a systems approach that

is designed to be flexible and to adapt to evolving scientific, tech-

nological, and societal needs toward delivering an ocean observ-

ing system with a maximized user base. The Framework shows

how to respond to societal issues with science-driven plans,

tools, and deployment strategies that will successfully address

those issues. It further recognizes that to maintain a fit- for-

purpose ocean observing system, the outputs (publications,

products, ocean services) must properly address the issues that

drove the original requirements. This system evaluation creates

a constant feedback loop that ensures requirements are always

science- driven and informed by societal needs.

Just a few month ago, OceanObs’19 assembled more that

1,500 ocean scientists, engineers, and users of ocean observ-

ing technologies from 74 countries and across many disciplines.

Leading up to the conference, the community produced more

than 120 community white papers. The overarching conference

goal was to improve the governance of a global ocean observing

system by including advocacy, funding, and alignment with best

practices, and to designate responsibility for product definition

that encompasses production and timely delivery at the appro-

priate scales (global, basin, regional, national) to serve user

needs. The conference articulated a vision for ocean observing:

In recognition of the central role the ocean plays in supporting

all life on Earth, we see a resilient world whose societies prosper

through sustainable interactions with our ocean, guided by timely,

reliable, and accessible information.

The conference also produced a declaration:

We, the participants of the decadal OceanObs’19 Conference, hear

the call from maritime stakeholders, operational resource man-

agement agencies, and researchers from private and public orga-

nizations about the importance of more complete and sustained

observations in the ocean globally. Information about the ocean

is needed to advance the understanding of the ocean system,

strengthen security and safety at sea, mitigate the risk of disasters

including those related to a changing climate, reduce pollution and

harmful debris, and inform efforts to conserve life in the sea for the

benefit of future generations. It is required to design and support

policy options that sustain ocean-related human benefits.

OBSERVING THE OCEAN

From Niche to Norm

FROM THE PRESIDENT

Oceanography | December 2019

Followed by a call to the community:

In solidarity, we, the global ocean observing community and

users of this information, invite all governments, international

organizations, industries, scientists, engineers, stewards of ocean

resources, members of civil society, Indigenous societies, youth and

all of us who live, work and rely on the ocean to engage in a collec-

tive effort to evolve ocean observing to generate the data and infor-

mation we need for the ocean we want.

Specifically, 10 dimensions of action were highlighted:

1. Engage observers, data integrators, information providers,

and users from the scientific, public, private, and policy sec-

tors in the continuous process of planning, implementa-

tion, and review of an integrated and effective ocean observ-

ing system.

2. Focus the ocean observing system on addressing critical

human needs, scientific understanding of the ocean and the

linkages to the climate system, real time ocean information

services, and promotion of policies that sustain a healthy,

biologically diverse, and resilient ocean ecosystem.

3. Harness the creativity of the academic research and engi-

neering communities, and work in partnership with the pri-

vate and public sectors to evolve sensors and platforms, better

integrate observations, revolutionize information products

about the ocean, and increase efficiency and reduce costs at

each step of the ocean observing value chain.

4. Advance the frontiers of ocean observing capabilities from

the coast to the deep ocean, including all aspects of the

marine biome, disease vectors, pollutants, and exchanges of

energy, chemicals and biology at the boundaries between the

ocean and air, seafloor, land, ice, freshwater, and human pop-

ulated areas.

5. Improve the uptake of ocean data in models for understand-

ing and forecasting of the Earth system.

6. Ensure that all elements of the observing system are inter-

operable and that data are managed wisely, guided by open

data policies, and that data are shared in a timely manner.

7. Use best practices, standards, formats, vocabularies, and the

highest ethics in the collection and use of ocean data.

8. Involve the public through citizen-engaged observations,

information products, outreach, and formal education

programs.

9. Evolve ocean observing governance to learn and share, coor-

dinate, identify priorities, increase diversity, promote part-

nerships, and resolve conflicts, through a process of continu-

ing assessment to improve observing.

10. Promote investments in ocean observing and information

delivery and sustain support.

A timely commentary from John Bell of the European

Commission said, “Ocean Observing needs to develop from

niche to norm. Something that needs all parts of society to

be engaged in. Together we should recognize the benefits that

ocean observation, information, and knowledge bring to all of

us living, working and relying on the ocean.”

In the months to come, the OceanObs’19 organizers and

sponsors will launch several efforts to address issues around four

themes and other areas of community action. Information: how

do we meet future user needs? Interoperability: how can we bet-

ter communicate among observing systems to deliver products

for users that follow usability and other best practices across the

globe? Innovation: how can we spur innovation in observing

technologies, products, and user services? Integration: how can

we balance user and operator needs, capabilities, and knowledge

worldwide? There will be town halls at many ocean meetings

during the next 12 months, and I am looking forward to seeing

impactful changes in the way we cooperate, share, and resource

ocean observing. How can we go from the niche of science and

engineering to the norm of serving society with critical ocean

information? The outcomes of this process will inform a grow-

ing GOOS and provide critical energy toward the UN Decade

of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021–2030). I

am also sure it will have an impact on how we will advance and

develop The Oceanography Society (TOS).

TOS supported the OceanObs19 process by publicizing the

calls for community white papers and by contributing funds

toward early career attendance, and we helped to organize a

pre-conference early career workshop. During the conference,

a TOS booth provided attendees with an opportunity to learn

about TOS and to hear from the community about how TOS can

support ocean observing in the future. I could imagine that in

the future TOS might sponsor an award to recognize outstand-

ing individuals or team initiatives in the area of sustained global

ocean observing. A proposal for this award would go to the TOS

Council and could become an item of discussion regarding TOS

strategic development under the heading “TOS Strategy 2030,”

to be completed at the end of 2020.

Martin Visbeck, TOS President

OceanObs19: http://www.oceanobs19.net/

OceanObs19 Declaration: http://www.oceanobs19.net/

wp- content/uploads/2019/09/OO19-Conference-Statement_

online.pdf

Global Ocean Observing System: https://www.goosocean.org/

Framework for Ocean Observing: http://www.oceanobs09.net/foo/

Oceanography | Vol.32, No.4

Throughout history, humans have been

fascinated with the “living light” produced

by luminescent organisms. Today, the

glimmering power of bioluminescence

has been harnessed for lifesaving uses

in medicine, from lighting up structures

inside the brain to illuminating the pro-

gression of cancer cells.

One of the first accounts of biolumines-

cence and health was written in 77 CE. In

Historia Naturalis, Roman physician and

naturalist Pliny the Elder described medic-

inal substances derived from aquatic ani-

mals, including pulmo marinus. A jellyfish

now known as Pelagia noctiluca, Latin for

“night light of the sea,” the species emits

a glowing substance from the outer edge

of its bell. When boiled in water or taken

in wine, Pliny believed, pulmo marinus

treated “the gravell and the stone.”

Also in the first century, Greek physi-

cian and botanist Pedanius Dioscorides

posited in De Materia Medica, an herbal

medicine encyclopedia he penned, that

“pulmo marinus being beaten small whilst

it is new and so applied, doth help such as

are troubled with chillblanes and such as

ye have goute.”  

Some two thousand years have passed

since the time of Pliny and Dioscorides.

Only recently, however, have researchers

discovered exactly how bioluminescence

is created, let alone how to employ it in

cures for disease.

The sparkle of marine bioluminescence

occurs in species from fish in the deep

ocean to jellyfish and dinoflagellates in the

shallows, among others. They create light

through the interaction of the enzymes

luciferase and luciferin (the terms are

derived from the Latin word lucifer—light-

bringer), or by hosting light-emitting bacte-

ria. Biofluorescence, sometimes confused

with bioluminescence, is released when

an animal such as a jellyfish or eel absorbs

light and re-emits it in a different color.

Now, “a vast range of analytical tech-

niques has been developed based on

bioluminescence,” write Zinaida Kaskova,

Aleksandra Tsarkova, and Ilia Yampolsky

of the Russian Academy of Sciences and

the Pirogov Russian National Research

Medical University in a 2016 paper in

Chemical Society Reviews.

“Immunoassays,

gene

expression

assays, drug screening, bioimaging of live

organisms, cancer studies, and the inves-

tigation of infectious diseases,” the scien-

tists state, are just the beginning of a tale

of 1,001 lights, as the researchers refer to

the growing number of bioluminescence

discoveries with applications in medicine.

A REVOLUTION IN SCIENCE

An early chapter in the tale of 1,001 lights,

according

to

neurobiologist

Vincent

Pieribone, director of the John B. Pierce

Laboratory at the Yale University School

of Medicine, is green fluorescent protein

(GFP). GFP is found in the crystal jelly-

fish Aequorea victoria. This and other

fluorescent proteins have revolutionized

research in fields from immunology to

neuroscience.

Many organisms are now known to

manufacture fluorescent proteins. “These

proteins are extending the boundaries of

science, including allowing researchers to

understand, manipulate, and interact with

the living brain,” says Pieribone.

When

scientists

develop

methods

that allow them to see things that were

once invisible, research takes a giant

leap forward. For example, in the seven-

teenth century, Anton van Leeuwenhoek

invented the microscope. A new world

opened.

Scientists

could

suddenly

observe previously unknown bacteria and

blood cells. So it is with fluorescent pro-

teins, Pieribone says.

BRIGHT GREEN EEL PATENT

Based on a bright green fluorescent pro-

tein found in two fish—the false moray

eels

Kaupichthys

hyoproroides

and

Kaupichthys n. sp.—Pieribone’s team

was awarded a patent for a new method

of detecting bilirubin in blood or urine.

Bilirubin is produced in bone marrow cells

and in the liver as the end product of red

blood cell (hemoglobin) breakdown.

High levels of bilirubin may indicate

liver damage or other disease. Molecular

Tools LLC, a biotech company in Frederick,

Maryland, is working with the scientists to

develop new ways of testing for bilirubin

based on these proteins.

Bioluminescent,

Biofluorescent Species

Light the Way to New

Biomedical Discoveries

By Cheryl Lyn Dybas

Oceanography | Vol.32, No.4

Image of the bioluminescence of

Chaetopterus, the parchment tubeworm.

Image credit: David Liittschwager, Scripps

Institution of Oceanography

The bioluminescent crystal jellyfish

Aequorea victoria. Image Credit:

Sierra Blakely, Wikimedia Commons

Bioluminescent,

Biofluorescent Species

Light the Way to New

Biomedical Discoveries

By Cheryl Lyn Dybas

RIPPLE MARKS: THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY

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