October 2023

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

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

October 2023 | Oceanography

CONTENTS

VOL. 36, NO. 2–3, OCTOBER 2023

SPECIAL ISSUE ON THE

PACIFIC MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL LABORATORY

50 YEARS OF INNOVATIVE RESEARCH IN OCEANOGRAPHY

6 Foreword

By R.W. Spinrad

8 Introduction

By R.A. Feely

10 The History and Evolution of PMEL: Purposeful Research that Impacts

Environmental Policy

By M.M. McClure, C.L. Sabine, R.A. Feely, S.R. Hammond, C. Meinig, M.J. McPhaden,

P.J. Stabeno, and E. Bernard

26 Data Processing and Management at PMEL: A 50-Year Perspective

By E.F. Burger, K.M. O’Brien, S. Hankin, R. Schweitzer, L. Kamb, S. Osborne,

and A. Manke

32 Tropical Ocean Observations for Weather and Climate: A Decadal Overview

of the Global Tropical Moored Buoy Array

By M.J. McPhaden, K.J. Connell, G.R. Foltz, R.C. Perez, and K. Grissom

44 SIDEBAR. Surviving Piracy and the Coronavirus Pandemic

By K.J. Connell, M.J. McPhaden, G.R. Foltz, R.C. Perez, and K. Grissom

46 PMEL Ocean Climate Stations as Reference Time Series and Research

Aggregate Devices

By M.F. Cronin, N.D. Anderson, D. Zhang, P. Berk, S.M. Wills, Y. Serra, C. Kohlman,

A.J. Sutton, M.C. Honda, Y. Kawai, J. Yang, J. Thomson, N. Lawrence-Slavas,

J. Reeves Eyre, and C. Meinig

54 After Two Decades, Argo at PMEL, Looks to the Future

By G.C. Johnson and A.J. Fassbender

60 PMEL’s Contribution to Observing and Analyzing Decadal Global Ocean

Changes Through Sustained Repeat Hydrography

By Z.K. Erickson, B.R. Carter, R.A. Feely, G.C. Johnson, J.D. Sharp, and R.E. Sonnerup

70 Observing Extreme Ocean and Weather Events Using Innovative Saildrone

Uncrewed Surface Vehicles

By D. Zhang, A.M. Chiodi, C. Zhang, G.R. Foltz, M.F. Cronin, C.W. Mordy, J. Cross,

E.D. Cokelet, J.A. Zhang, C. Meinig, N. Lawrence-Slavas, P.J. Stabeno, and R. Jenkins

78 Long-Term Biophysical Observations and Climate Impacts in US Arctic

Marine Ecosystems

By P.J. Stabeno, S. Bell, C. Berchok, E.D. Cokelet, J. Cross, R.M. McCabe, C.W. Mordy,

J. Overland, D. Strausz, M. Sullivan, and H.M. Tabisola

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October 2023 | 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.

October 2023 | Oceanography

156 SIDEBAR. Building Unique Collaborative Global Marine CO2 Observatories

By S. Musielewicz, J. Osborne, S. Maenner Jones, R. Battisti, S. Dougherty, and R. Bott

158 Can Seasonal Forecasts of Ocean Conditions Aid Fishery Managers?

Experiences from 10 Years of J-SCOPE

By S.A. Siedlecki, S.R. Alin, E.L. Norton, N.A. Bond, A.J. Hermann, R.A. Feely,

and J.A. Newton

168 Climate Roles of Non-Sea Salt Sulfate and Sea Spray Aerosol in

the Atmospheric Marine Boundary Layer: Highlights of 40 Years

of PMEL Research

By P.K. Quinn, T.S. Bates, D.J. Coffman, J.E. Johnson, and L.M. Upchurch

175 50 Years of PMEL Tsunami Research and Development

By E. Bernard, C. Meinig, V.V. Titov, and Y. Wei

186 Technology Transfer of PMEL Tsunami Research Protects Populations

and Expands the New Blue Economy

By V.V. Titov, C. Meinig, S. Stalin, Y. Wei, C. Moore, and E. Bernard

196 PMEL Passive Acoustics Research: Quantifying the Ocean Soundscape

from Whales to Wave Energy

By R.P. Dziak, H. Matsumoto, S. Haver, D.K. Mellinger, L. Roche, J.H. Haxel, S. Stalin,

C. Meinig, K. Kohlman, A. Sremba, J. Gedamke, L. Hatch, and S. Van Parijs

206 SPOTLIGHT. The PMEL Earth-Ocean Interactions Program: Beyond Vents

By D.A. Butterfield, S.L. Walker, T. Baumberger, J. Beeson, J. Resing, S.G. Merle,

A. Antriasian, K. Roe, G.-S. Lu, P. Barrett, and W.W. Chadwick Jr.

212 SPOTLIGHT. MAPR: PMEL’s Miniature Autonomous Plume Recorder

By S.L. Walker

216 Accelerating Research and Development in the US Arctic: Reflections

on a NOAA Program

By H.M. Tabisola, C.W. Mordy, and S. Stalin

DEPARTMENTS

5 QUARTERDECK. Introducing Exciting New Publishing Possibilities with

Oceanography Flipbooks

By E.S. Kappel

222 FROM THE TOS JEDI COMMITTEE. Unpaid Internships Are a Barrier to

Diverse and Equitable Recruitment in Marine Science

By A.M. Kreuser, A.L. Bishop, and E.L. Meyer-Gutbrod

225 THE OCEANOGRAPHY CLASSROOM. Activity Bingo: Nudging Students to

Make the Most Out of Fieldwork

By M.S. Glessmer, L. Latuta, F. Saltalamacchia, and K. Daae

229 CAREER PROFILES. Douglas Bell, Environmental Protection Specialist,

Chesapeake Bay Program, US Environmental Protection Agency |

Regina Guazzo, Oceanographer and Outreach Lead, Whale Acoustic

Reconnaissance Project, Naval Information Warfare Center Pacific

CONTACT US

The Oceanography Society

1 Research Court, Suite 450-117

Rockville, MD 20850 USA

t: (1) 301-251-7708

info@tos.org

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October 2023 | Oceanography

CORRECTIONS

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Oceanography | Vol. 36, No. 2–3

The Oceanography Society was founded in 1988 to advance

oceanographic research, technology, and education, and

to disseminate knowledge of oceanography and its appli-

cation through research and education. TOS promotes

the broad understanding of oceanography, facilitates con-

sensus building across all the disciplines of the field, and

informs the public about ocean research, innovative tech-

nology, and educational opportunities throughout the spec-

trum of oceanographic inquiry.

OFFICERS

PRESIDENT: Deborah Bronk

PRESIDENT-ELECT: Paula Bontempi

PAST-PRESIDENT: Andone Lavery

SECRETARY: Allison Miller

TREASURER: Susan Banahan

COUNCILORS

AT-LARGE: Mona Behl

APPLIED TECHNOLOGY: Anna Michel

BIOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Kim S. Bernard

CHEMICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Jun Nishioka

EARLY CAREER: Erin Satterthwaite

EDUCATION: Sara Harris

GEOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: Laura Guertin

OCEAN DATA SCIENCE: Vicki Ferrini

OCEAN SCIENCE AND POLICY: Leopoldo C. Gerhardinger

PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY: LuAnne Thompson

STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE: Josette McLean

JEDI COUNCILOR: Sheri White

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Jennifer Ramarui

CORPORATE AND INSTITUTIONAL

MEMBERS

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Integral Consulting Inc. » integral-corp.com

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RBR » rbr-global.com

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Sequoia » sequoiasci.com

tos.org

EDITOR

Ellen S. Kappel, Geosciences Professional Services Inc.

ASSISTANT EDITOR

Vicky Cullen

DESIGN/PRODUCTION

Johanna Adams

ASSOCIATE EDITORS

Claudia Benitez-Nelson, University of South Carolina

Ian Brosnan, NASA Ames Research Center

Grace Chang, Integral Consulting Inc.

Kjersti Daae, University of Bergen

Mirjam Glessmer, Lund University

Charles H. Greene, University of Washington

Amelia Shevenell, University of South Florida

William Smyth, Oregon State University

Peter Wadhams, University of Cambridge

Oceanography contains peer-reviewed articles that chronicle

all aspects of ocean science and its applications. The journal

presents significant research, noteworthy achievements, excit-

ing new technology, and articles that address public policy and

education and how they are affected by science and technol-

ogy. The overall goal of Oceanography is cross- disciplinary

communication in the ocean sciences.

Oceanography (Print ISSN 1042-8275; Online ISSN 2377-617X)

is published by The Oceanography Society, 1 Research Court,

Suite 450-117, Rockville, MD 20850 USA. Oceanography arti-

cles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0

International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation,

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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.

Oceanography

tos.org/oceanography

Oceanography | Vol. 36, No. 2–3

October 2023 | Oceanography

In June 2023, The Oceanography Society (TOS) introduced its new Oceanography flipbook kiosk

(https:// oceanographydigital. tos.org/), where anyone can page through full issues of the magazine and

supplements such as those on ocean exploration and ocean observing. The pages render crisply, and issues

are easily navigable. Issue availability on the kiosk goes back through 2015. This open access kiosk replaces

the former digital editions that were made available to TOS members only through Advanced Publishing.

An exciting enhancement now available to Oceanography authors through these flipbooks is the

ability to embed videos, animations, photo galleries, and audio files in articles. This special issue of

Oceanography on “Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory: 50 Years of Innovative Research in

Oceanography” is the first time authors have had this option available. In the flipbook version of this spe-

cial issue (https://oceanographyd\igital.tos.org/flip-book/110286/579668), readers can click on the links

in figures to access movies in Feely et al. that show ocean pH as well as calcium and aragonite satura-

tion states through time. In Walker, readers can view a movie of West Mata submarine volcano showing

results from MAPR (Miniature Autonomous Plume Recorder) data collection. In Hermann et al., ani-

mations derived from model outputs are available for viewing. In Butterfield et al., the title page graphic

includes a link to video of the seafloor taken by Schmidt Ocean Institute’s remotely operated vehicle

Subastian. Bernard et al. includes links to movies related to tsunami propagation and forecasting.

We strongly encourage future Oceanography authors to take advantage of this opportunity to enhance

their articles by adding various media to them. When submitting these extras, please consider the

following guidelines:

• Videos must be provided to Oceanography in a format compatible with YouTube. We recommend

that videos not exceed a few minutes in length. They will be uploaded to The Oceanography Society’s

YouTube channel and linked to a figure in the flipbook. If the movie exists on another institution’s

YouTube or Vimeo channel, and that link is stable, we can instead use that link.

• GIFS can be added straight to the flipbook with a maximum size of 5 MB.

• Audio files must be in MP3 format and no larger than 100 MB.

• Photos for a photo gallery must be in jpg or png format and no larger than 5 MB each.

All enhancements must be directly associated with a figure in the article—the link to media is embed-

ded within the figure (e.g., for videos and GIFS, readers will see an arrow on top of the figure to click on).

Any captions and credits should be provided at the time of submission of the media to Oceanography so

that we can include them appropriately. Whenever such article enhancements are available, we will add a

subhead in the main article called “Flipbook Edition” to alert readers.

The Oceanography Society is always seeking new and creative ways to foster cross-disciplinary com-

munication in the ocean sciences. We hope future Oceanography flipbooks will be a leap forward in

achieving this goal. Please contact me at ekappel@geo-prose.com with any questions about sharing

media in your next Oceanography article.

QUARTERDECK

INTRODUCING EXCITING NEW PUBLISHING POSSIBILITIES WITH

OCEANOGRAPHY FLIPBOOKS

Ellen S. Kappel, Editor

ARTICLE DOI. https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2023.234

Oceanography | Vol. 36, No. 2–3

SPECIAL ISSUE ON THE PACIFIC MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL LABORATORY:

50 YEARS OF INNOVATIVE RESEARCH IN OCEANOGRAPHY

This year marks the 50th anniversary of NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory

(PMEL). This world-class research facility has proven itself a global leader in the develop-

ment and deployment of innovative strategies for ocean observation and monitoring. It is

thanks to the dedicated work of PMEL researchers that we have advanced our understand-

ing of the climate and weather nexus, ocean acidification, marine ecosystems, and ocean

and coastal processes, all while advancing science technology innovation.

Prior to becoming NOAA’s Administrator, I served as the Assistant Administrator for

NOAA Research. I am keenly aware of and take great pride in PMEL science and engineer-

ing innovations. From MAPCO2, Deep Argo, FOCI, and DART, the work at PMEL helps

us to better understand our planet and protect the lives, livelihoods, and lifestyles of the

public we serve.

The full list of accomplishments that PMEL has achieved in the past 50 years is long, but

there are certainly some standouts.

Notably, PMEL has helped strengthen climate science with Argo, the Global Tropical

Moored Buoy Array, the Kuroshio Extension Observatory, Ocean Station Papa, the Research

Moored Array for African-Asian-Australian Monsoon Analysis and Prediction (RAMA),

and more. NOAA’s ability to build a Climate Ready Nation and equip decision-makers with

needed climate information is informed by the work of these initiatives.

Additionally, scientists at PMEL have conducted seminal research on the changing ocean

carbon dioxide chemistry and its impact on marine ecosystems–research which ultimately

led to shifting public perception of ocean acidification and climate change mitigation. The

dedicated work of PMEL scientists has also given us a better understanding of Arctic ocean-

ography and ecosystems and how climate change is affecting marine polar regions.

And critically, the work underway at PMEL is helping save lives, as seen in the increased

speed and accuracy of operational tsunami forecasts and warnings. It’s examples like this

that demonstrate how crucial PMEL is to the day-to-day lives of people around the world

who benefit from this research.

FOREWORD

October 2023 | Oceanography

PMEL research and exploration also foster imagination and fascination with the deep

ocean and all that we might learn about our planet and the origin of life in the coming

years. From contributing to the curation of the spectacular Smithsonian National Museum

of Natural History Sant Ocean Hall to continuing to educate the public about the won-

der of the ocean—PMEL scientists continue to inspire the next generation of scientists and

researchers from the time they are children.

All of these remarkable undertakings cannot be accomplished alone. Co-located with the

NOAA Fisheries Northwest Fisheries Science Center and Alaska Fisheries Science Center,

PMEL fosters partnership across the NOAA line offices.

PMEL also works side by side with scientists from three NOAA Cooperative Institutes.

The Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, and Ecosystem Studies (CICOES) at the

University of Washington is one of the oldest and largest of NOAA’s Cooperative Institutes,

conducting research at the forefront of climate change, ocean processes, and fisheries. The

Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research (CIMAR) at the University of

Hawai‘i Mānoa extends NOAA’s work in the Indo-Pacific region, conducting cutting edge

research to inform coastal and marine resource management. The Cooperative Institute for

Marine Ecosystem and Resources Studies (CIMERS) at Oregon State University advances

innovative multidisciplinary research in support of the NOAA mission.

Fifty years ago, it would have been difficult to imagine that we would know what we do

about the ocean on such a granular level. Getting to where we are today has taken genera-

tions of dedication, innovation, and cooperation from the staff at PMEL. I can only imagine

the knowledge we stand to gain and the advancements we stand to make in the next 50 years.

Richard W. Spinrad, Ph.D.

Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere

and NOAA Administrator

ARTICLE DOI: https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2023.207

Oceanography | Vol. 36, No. 2–3

In October 2023, we will celebrate the 50th anniversary of NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental

Laboratory (PMEL), a world leader in oceanographic research and the development of innovative

instrumentation and measurement strategies for monitoring and observing ocean conditions at global

scales. Through the collective efforts of PMEL and its national and international research partners, our

researchers have fundamentally advanced the scientific understanding of climate variability and change,

extreme and weather events, the effects of climate change on marine ecosystems, ocean carbon and

sulfur cycles, ocean acidification, Arctic oceanography, tsunamis, and ocean-seafloor interactive pro-

cesses. During this same period, PMEL scientists and technicians have been advancing the science and

technology innovation necessary to expand our observational capabilities in order to provide coverage

over large sections of the ocean. These advances have profoundly shaped our understanding of Earth

system processes and have led to improvements in environmental prediction, climate assessments, and

weather and climate services.

As one component of PMEL’s 50th anniversary celebration, the PMEL team has been working with the

Oceanography editor to develop a special issue of the journal focused on highlighting the laboratory’s sci-

entific work over the last five decades. This special issue is divided into themes that delineate how PMEL

research and observations have contributed to the advancement of NOAA’s mission to understand and

predict changes in climate, weather, and oceans and coasts, and to share that knowledge and informa-

tion broadly. The special issue is organized along six themes, each of which has one or two guest editors.

The theme editors extend their most sincere thanks and appreciation to the lead authors and

coauthors, scientists, and staff who carried out the research and provided the data that are described in

the articles presented in this special issue. We especially thank Sarah Battle and Sandra Bigley for their

exceptional help with the preparation of the figures and editing of the manuscripts. We are grateful to

David Detlor, John Thibodeau, and Avi Litwack at the NOAA Fisheries Office of Science and Technology

and graphic designer Sandra Graubard for their additional support. We also want to thank Ellen Kappel,

Vicky Cullen, and Johanna Adams of The Oceanography Society’s Oceanography staff for their incredible

editing work, layout designs, and artwork suggestions that improved the manuscripts.

As a final note, it has been a special honor for me to spend most of my career working with the many

outstanding and dedicated individuals who I have had the privilege to call my friends and colleagues at

PMEL over the last 50 years. I have been truly blessed to have the opportunity to work with folks who

fully believe in the NOAA concepts of science, service, and stewardship.

Richard A. Feely

Special Issue Guest Editor and

Senior Scientist, NOAA PMEL

ARTICLE DOI: https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2023.233

Pacific Marine

Environmental Laboratory

50 YEARS OF INNOVATIVE RESEARCH IN OCEANOGRAPHY

INTRODUCTION TO

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50 YEARS OF INNOVATIVE RESEARCH IN OCEANOGRAPHY

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