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Category Archives: Publication Stories

Galapagos Islands: A Telling Study Site for Coral Reef Scientists

Coral scientists recently traveled to the Galapagos Islands to document coral reef health following the 2016-17 El Niño Southern Oscillation event (ENSO), which bathed the region in abnormally warm waters. Historically, these events have triggered coral bleaching and large-scale mortality, as seen in response to ENSO events of 1982-83 and 1997-98. Interestingly, these same reefs exhibited minimal bleaching in response to this most recent event. Scientists are determining whether this response is due to differing levels of heat stress, or an increased tolerance to warm water in the remnant coral communities.

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Study shows ocean acidification is two-front assault on coral reefs

The study, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, measured changes in the reef framework in several naturally high-carbon dioxide settings near Papua New Guinea. For the first time, scientists found increased activity of worms and other organisms that bore into the reef structure, resulting in a net loss of the framework that is the foundation of coral reef ecosystems.

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Volcano Spewing Carbon Dioxide Drives Coral to Give Way to Algae

The new research published online August 10 in Nature Climate Change provides a stark look into the future of ocean acidification – the absorption by the global oceans of increasing amounts of human-caused carbon dioxide emissions. Scientists predict that elevated carbon dioxide absorbed by the global oceans will drive similar ecosystem shifts, making it difficult for coral to build skeletons and easier for other plants and animals to erode them.

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Increased Erosion at Acidified Coral Reefs

Corals live and thrive by maintaining a careful balance between their growth rate and the rate of erosion. Scientists already know the projected increases in carbon dioxide in our global oceans, known as ocean acidification, will slow the rate at which corals build the hard calcium carbonate skeletons that are the foundation of their habitat. A new study published online today in PLOS ONE demonstrates that in naturally highly acidified waters, these coral skeletons will also face increased erosion from microscopic organisms, called bioerosion. The result is accelerated breakdown and loss of reef structures, and potentially the loss of essential habitat.

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Study Explores Role of El Niño in Transport of Waterborne Disease

A new study published in the journal Nature Microbiology highlights how emerging, devastating outbreaks of Vibrio infection in Latin America might be linked to El Niño, a climate pattern that periodically causes surface temperatures to warm throughout the equatorial Pacific Ocean. A researcher with the University of Miami’s Cooperative Institute of Marine & Atmospheric Studies at NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic & Meteorological Lab was part of an international research team that used microbiological, genomic, and bioinformatic tools to demonstrate how El Niño provides a mechanism for the transport of disease from Asia into the Americas. 

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New Study Describes Link Between South Atlantic Ocean and Global Rainfall Variability

In a recent paper published in the Journal of Climate, scientists with NOAA and the University of Miami have identified how variability in ocean circulation in the South Atlantic Ocean may influence global rainfall and climate patterns. The study by researchers at NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory (AOML) and the Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies (CIMAS) suggests that the South Atlantic is a potential predictor of global rainfall variability with a lead-time of approximately 20 years. This link between the South Atlantic Ocean and weather and climate could provide significant long-term insight for water management on a global scale.

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10th Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina

Early on the morning of August 29th, 2005, Hurricane Katrina made landfall on the Louisiana delta region and the Mississippi coast.  The storm surge brought enormous damage to the Gulf Coast and, when the levees around New Orleans failed, a great number of fatalities.  Coming amidst the very busy 2005 hurricane season, Katrina brought death and destruction not seen in a U.S. land-falling hurricane in decades.

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Volcano Spewing Carbon Dioxide Drives Coral to Give Way to Algae

Scientists from NOAA and the Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies at the University of Miami have documented a dramatic shift from vibrant coral communities to carpets of algae in remote Pacific Ocean waters where an undersea volcano spews carbon dioxide.

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Scientists Find Southern Ocean Removing CO2 from the Atmosphere More Efficiently

A research vessel ploughs through the waves, braving the strong westerly winds of the Roaring Forties in the Southern Ocean in order to measure levels of dissolved carbon dioxide in the surface of the ocean. (Nicolas Metzl, LOCEAN/IPSL Laboratory).

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AOML Scientists Featured in Special Women’s History Month Issue of Oceanography Magazine

Women’s History Month is celebrated annually in March and pays tribute to the generations of women whose contributions made a historical impact on society. It is also a month to honor women who are currently working hard to make positive innovations and impressions on the world.

The Oceanography Society published a special issue of their magazine for 2015 Women’s History Month entitled “Women in Oceanography: a decade Later,” which features four of AOML’s female oceanographers.

The Oceanography Society’s feature includes statistics, women’s program descriptions, and one-page autobiographical sketches written by women oceanographers. It is the sequel to their first “Women in Oceanography” issue, released in 2005, dedicated to exploring why men outnumbered women at higher levels of the field.

This issue evaluates progresses made in retaining women in the oceanography field over the past decade. The article included over 200 autobiographical sketches, which highlighted AOML’s Libby (Elizabeth) Johns, Renellys C. Perez, Claudia Schmid, and Silvia L. Garzoli.

Click below to find out more about each scientist.

Libby (Elizabeth) Johns Oceanographer for the Physical Oceanography Division at AOML

Over the past decade, Libby has continued with her research in south Florida coastal oceanography and broadened her interests to include fisheries oceanography. As a woman in her chosen field, Libby faced a few challenges. First and foremost, the challenge of being a wonderful mother while continuing to excel at her professional career had her constantly adapting to life’s changes. Another challenge Libby faced was transitioning from strictly physical oceanography to interdisciplinary, applied oceanography.  Libby’s advice; “Do not settle for the status quo, but instead constantly evaluate the various parts of a happy and successful life so every aspect can compliment each other.”

Claudia Schmid Oceanographer for the Physical Oceanography Division at AOML

A combined love of the ocean, math and physics brought Claudia to the field of oceanography. Growing up, she spent summers mostly in or on the waters of the Mediterranean. Through her research projects, she achieved global data coverage with regular sampling. For Claudia this was a dream come true. It inspired her to become more involved with data management, co-principal investigator for the Argo project, and join the Prediction and Research Moored Array in the Tropical Atlantic project.

Silvia L. Garzoli Chief Scientists Emeritus at AOML & CIMAS

Over the past 10 years, Silvia transitioned through many life changes. From director of the Physical Oceanography Division (PhOD) at NOAA’s AOML, to Chief Scientist of AOML, to retirement and a part-time scientific position, Silvia witnessed positive changes in the challenges women in science face. When she was PhOD’s director she faced administrative and management challenges, including being a “woman boss,” During her time as director, PhOD greatly benefitted and received excellent reviews after an intensive external review process. Now Silvia works part time as a scientist in order to direct her energy toward writing papers and experiencing extended research cruises. Her advice; “Change is good. It is difficult, and scary, but good!”

Renellys C. Perez Associate Scientist for CIMAS and AOML

Renellys’s love of the ocean brought her to her current research, which is focused on developing a better understanding of ocean currents and their roles in ocean-atmospheric heat exchange. Her investigations require collaboration with other researchers around the world, which allows her to travel and conduct research at sea. This can sometimes be challenging because it involves time spent away from her husband and daughter. Being a woman in science required that Renellys be able to balance family and a career.  Renellys also had to overcome learning how to navigate the US science funding system. She plans on using the multitasking skills she developed in her family life and putting them to use at work, funding multiple projects simultaneously.

Originally published in March 2015 by Shannon Jones 

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