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Habitat Assessment and Marine Chemistry

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Habitat Assessment and Marine Chemistry (HAMC):
Nutritional Ecology
Contaminants and Oil
Nearshore Habitats
Division Activities:
Publications
Posters
Archives
beach combing eelgrass
Scientists beach seining an eelgrass bed.
 
analyzing solutions in the lab
A lab technician analyzing samples.
 
Oil in a small tidal pool
Crude oil persisting in the intertidal.

Habitat Program Manager

Jeep Rice
Auke Bay Laboratories
Alaska Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries

Ted Stevens Marine Research Institute
17109 Pt Lena Loop Rd
Juneau AK 99801
(907) 789-6020
Jeep.Rice@noaa.gov

The Habitat Assessment and Marine Chemistry Program conducts research on chemical and ecological processes that occur in marine, tidal, and watershed habitats ranging from the Arctic to the Gulf of Alaska. This program attempts to assess bioenergetics in various species and life stages, assess the impact of development and contaminants on these species and their habitats, and map and evaluate their habitat quality. The program comprises a mix of chemists and biologists focused into three project teams:

Nutritional ecology research or bioenergetics, assesses the nutritional value of forage species, including juvenile salmon, as measured by changes in lipid class, fatty acid, and caloric composition of these forage species. The studies seek to evaluate how habitat quality changes seasonally and spatially by understanding how prey organisms allocate energy between growth, reproduction, and fat storage.

Contaminants research quantifies threats from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) to reproductive, nursery, and feeding habitats for various life stages of salmon, herring, and other fish species. Much of this work has focused on understanding the long-term effects of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill.

Nearshore habitat research combines habitat mapping and fish utilization studies to identify use of essential fish habitat. Additional focus has been on identifying sensitive life stages of forage fish and chemical or physical impacts of development on the quality of eelgrass and kelp bed habitats.

 

News and Research Highlights

humback fluke  

New! Juneau Humpback Whale Catalog

August 11, 2008

A resource for humpback whale fluke identification including 99 fluke photographs as well as general inforrmation about the humpbacks that frequent the Juneau area. More>

 

Recent Publications, Poster Presentations, Reports & Activities

  • Morphology and molecular phylogeny of Aureophycus aleuticus gen. et sp. nov (Laminariales, Phaeophyceae) from the Aleutian Islands.
    KAWAI, H., T. HANYUDA, M. LINDEBERG, and S. C. LINDSTROM. 2008. Morphology and molecular phylogeny of Aureophycus aleuticus gen. et sp. nov (Laminariales, Phaeophyceae) from the Aleutian Islands. J. Phycol. 44:1013-1021. 
     
  • Fish assemblages in shallow, nearshore waters of the Bering Sea.
    THEDINGA, J. F., S. W. JOHNSON, A. D. NEFF, and M. R. LINDEBERG. 2008. Fish assemblages in shallow, nearshore waters of the Bering Sea. Trans. Am. Fish. Soc. 137:1157-1164. 
     
  • Temporal Stability of Fatty Acids in Herring Hearts
    By:  JACEK MASELKO, RON HEINTZ, TED OTIS
    Conference:  Alaska Marine Science Symposium, Anchorage, AK, Jan 2008
    (2008 poster, .pdf, 332KB)   Online.

     
  • Humpback Whale Predation on Pacific Herring in Southern Lynn Canal: Testing a Top-down Hypothesis
    By:  JOHN R. MORAN, STANLEY D. RICE, SUZANNE F. TEERLINK
    Conference:  Alaska Marine Science Symposium, Anchorage, AK, Jan 2008
    (2008 poster, .pdf, 210KB)   Online.

     
  • Pacific Herring in Lynn Canal, Alaska: Are They a Discrete Population?


See the publications and poster databases for additional listings.
 

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