Partnerships, Training and Leadership
•Collaborations with Other Programs
• Training New Scientists
• Maintaining Leadership roles in CCAMLR and the Scientific Community
2
COLLABORATIONS
Collaborations with Scientists at US Institutions
Collaborations with International Antarctic Programs and Scientists
3
Collaborations with US Scientists
California Academy of Sciences Drs Mooi, Van Syoc, Gosliner & WilliamsFarallon Institute & CUNY CSI Drs Santora and VeitFlorida Atlantic University Dr. J MooreMoss Landing Marine Lab Drs Kim and LoebN SF- Office of Polar Programs Drs Marinelli and Penhale Ohio University Dr EastmanOld Dominion University Drs Hofmann and AshfordPomona College Dr N Karnovsky
Sonoma State University Dr CrockerSmithsonian National Museum Dr AhearnUC Santa Barbara Drs Ross and QuetinUC Santa Cruz Dr CostaUniversity of California at San Diego Drs Mitchell and Holm-HansenUniversity of Maryland Drs Lynch and FaganUniversity of North Carolina-Wilmington Dr Emslie and M PolitoYale University Dr Near
4
International Collaborations
Australian Antarctic Program Drs Kawaguchi & GalesBrazilian Antarctic Program Dr SanderBritish Antarctic Survey Drs Forcada, Trathan & HillThe CCAMLR Secretariat Drs Ramm & ReidDalhousie University, Canada Dr IversonDokuz Eylul University, Turkey Dr BiszelInstitut für Seefischerei, Germany Drs Seigel & KockIstituto di Scienze Marine, Italy Dr LaMesa
Instituto Antártida de Chile Drs Torres, Blank & V Vallejos New Zealand National Institute ofWater & Atmospheric Research Dr HanchetNorwegian University of Science andTechnology Dr Van ArdelaanPolish Antarctic Program Drs Tatur, Zdanowsky. Salwicka & KorczakSiena University, Italy Drs Corsolini, Schiavone & FocardiUniversidad de Chile Dr AbalosUniversity of Tasmania Dr Hindell & M-A Lea
5
Arrivalconditions
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
6
Egg massAdult weights
Siena University, Italy— lipid analysis of winter diets and
contaminant loads
UNC-Wilmington— Egg shell and feather collections for C13
and N15 analysis of diets
Arrival conditions
Collaborators
Collaborations
7
Arrivalconditions
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
8
Nest and chick counts
Oceanites— Database for tracking trends
throughout the Antarctic Peninsula region
Census
Collaborators
Collaborations
9
Arrivalconditions
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
10
Diet— Composition and weight of diet— Krill size/sex distributions
Polish Academy of Science— ID of phytoplankton in krill stomachs
British Antarctic Survey— Length frequency analysis and cohort
strength in the Scotia SeaPomona College
— ID of fish in penguin diets from otolith samples
Diets
Collaborators
Collaborations
11
Arrivalconditions
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
12
Foraging trips— Spatial coverage— Trip duration
Farallon Institute— Compare at-sea observations with
satellite-tracking studies
Foraging ecology
Collaborators
Collaborations
13
Arrivalconditions
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
14
Incubation shiftsBreeding chronologyBreeding success
University of Maryland— Assess temporal variation in breeding
chronology on regional scales— Calibrate off-peak census data
Breeding success
Collaborators
Collaborations
15
Arrivalconditions
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
16
RecruitmentSurvivalFecundity
BAS/UCSD-SIO— Development of food web models
(Foosa)
Demography
Collaborators
Collaborations
17
Arrivalconditions
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
18
Sienna UniversityUNC-Wilmington
OceanitesBrazilian Antarctic
Program
Polish Academy of ScienceBritish Antarctic Survey
Pomona College
Farallon Institute Australian Antarctic
Program
University of Maryland
British Antarctic SurveyUCSD-SIO
19
Ocean-ography
Breeding success
Foraging ecology
DemographyCensus
Diets
20
UC-Santa CruzSMRU – St. Andrews
INACH – ChileBritish Antarctic
Survey
UNC-Wilmington
Dalhousie U
University of TasmaniaUniversity Pretoria SA
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
Universidad de Chile
UCSD-SIOOSU-Corvallis
21
Finfish Abundance/
Composition/Biology
Age and Growth
FinfishTaxonomy, Phylogeny,Population Genetics
Benthic Invert.Abundance/
Composition/Biology
BenthicTaxonomy,Phylogeny,Population Genetics
22
Institut für Seefischerei, GermanyNZ National Institute of Water & Atmospheric ResearchUniversity of California at DavisUniversity of Groningen, Netherlands
Old Dominion UniversityIstituto di Scienze Marine, Italy
Yale UniversityOhio UniversityUniversity of Kiel, GermanyFlorida Atlantic University
California Academy of ScienceYale UniversityScripps Inst. Of OceanographyMoss Landing Marine Lab
Auburn UniversityUniversity Center in Svalbard, NorwaySmithsonian National MuseumMuseum of Victoria
23
AMLR Collaborations with Currently Funded NSF-OPP & NASA Research
Dr S Emslie – UNC –Wilmington
Dr H Lynch – U Maryland and Oceanites
Dr D Costa – UC Santa Cruz
Dr T Near – Yale University
Dr N Wilson – Scripps Institute of Oceanography
Dr G Mitchell – SIO - NASA
24
TRAINING NEW SCIENTISTS
Graduate Students
Land-based Predator Research Opportunities
Ship-board Research and Support
US AMLR Observer Training Program
25
AMLR Funded Graduate Students:
Jefferson Hinke – PhD student, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, Penguin population demography models. Trivelpiece, Co-advisor.
George Watters – PhD 1997, SIO, Modeling to support precautionary development of an Antarctic Crab fishery. Holt, Co-advisor.
David Demer – PhD 1995, SIO, Development of acoustic methodology for detecting and quantifying Krill. Hewitt, Co-advisor.
26
Land-based Seabird and Seal Research Assistants: Copa and Cape Shirreff
Erica Goetz – Copa, Scripps Inst. Oceanography, PhD 2005.Matt Becker –Copa 1999-2001, Montana State University, PhD 2007.Dave McWethy- Copa 2000-01, Montana State University, PhD 2008.Stacey Buckelew – Copa 2001-03, UC Santa Cruz, PhD 2008.Mike Polito – Copa 2002-05, UNC Wilmington, PhD student.Steve Agius – Copa 2004-06, University Maine, Orono, MSc. 2009.Stephen Krepidelovsky - Copa 2006-08, University Hawaii, MSc. student.David Loomis – Copa 2005 & 2007-09, University Oregon, MSc student.
Jeremy Sterling – Cape Shirreff, 1998-2000, Univ. Washington, PhD 2006.Ben Pister – Cape Shirreff 2000, Scripps Inst Oceanography. PhD 2008Matt Rutishauser – Cape Shirreff 2001-02, UC Santa Cruz, MSc. 2005Michelle Antolos – Cape Shirreff 2002-04, UC Santa Cruz, PhD 2009. Aileen Miller – Cape Shirreff 2003-08, University Oregon, PhD student. Rachael Orben – Cape Shirreff 2005-07, UC San Jose, PhD student. Gitte McDonald – Cape Shirreff, 2005-08, UC Santa Cruz, PhD student
Cory Champagne – Cape Shirreff, 2005-06, UC Santa Cruz, PhD student
27
Ship board - Support of Students and Post-docs
Year Student/Post-doc Institute
2009 Kristen Kuhn (Post-doc) Yale University2009 Nerida Wilson (Post-doc) Scripps Institute of
Oceanogr2009 Malte Damerau (Ph.D. Student) University of Kiel, Germany2009 Tina Morgan (MS Student) Old Dominion University2009 Ryan Driscoll (MS Student) San Diego State University2008 Jarrod Santora (Post-doc) Farallon Institute2006 Cassandra Brooks (MS Student) Moss Landing Marine Lab2005 Daniel Doolittle (Ph.D. Student) University of Miami2005 Susanne Lockhart (Ph.D. Student) UC Santa Cruz2003 Andrew Thurber (Ph.D. Student) Moss Landing Marine Lab2001 Hauke Flores (Ph.D. Student) Univ of Groningen, Nethlds.2001 Tom Near (Post-doc) UC Davis
28
US AMLR Observer Program
US AMLR oversees:Outfitting, Training, Logistics and
Communications for the CCAMLR Scheme of Scientific Observers.
Scientific Observations:Catch and Effort Data – Target SpeciesBiological DataIncident Mortality and BycatchCompliance Observations
29
LEADERSHIP ROLES IN CCAMLR and SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
Chair and Convener Contributions
Working Group -Delegate Contributions
30
Chair and Convener roles in the Working Groups of CCAMLR:
Chair - CCAMLR - Scientific Committee, Holt, 2000-05Chair - WG EMM (Ecosystem Monitoring & Management) – Hewitt 2001-05 Chair – WG EMM – Watters, 2008 –presentChair –WG SAM (Statistics Assessments and Modeling) Jones 2005-07Chair – WG FSA (Fish Stock Assessment) - Jones, 2008 - present
Convener - First Workshop on SSMUs - Trivelpiece, 2002Convener - First Workshop on Modeling Procedures –Watters, 2005 Convener - Second Workshop on Modeling Procedures – Reiss, 2006Conveners - Workshop on Fish. & Eco Models – Watters & Jones, 2009
Convener - Workshop on Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems – Jones, 2009Convener – Joint SC-CAMLR/CEP Workshop – Watters, 2009
31
AERD Delegate Roles in the Working Groups of CCAMLR
Delegates to:Science Committee and Commission - Holt, Hewitt, Jones and WattersCCAMLR Ecosystem Monitoring & Management. - Goebel, Jones, Reiss, Trivelpiece, WattersWG Statistics Assessments & Modeling - Jones, Goebel, Reiss, Trivelpiece, WattersCommittee for Environmental Protection – Holt, Jones WG-Fish Stock Assessment - Holt, Jones
US Delegates to Workshops including:Patagonian Toothfish – Jones 2001Management of Mackerel Icefish – Jones 2001CEMP protocols – Goebel, Trivelpiece -2002WG-FSA Subgroup Assessment Methods –Jones 2003Bioregionalization – Jones 2007Predator Survey – Goebel, Trivelpiece 2007
US Delegate - SCAR Group on Life Science – Goebel, 2004-present
32
Future of the AMLR Program
Sunrise or Sunset ?