INTRODUCTION
The data in
this report were collected during cruises 0101* and 0104 of the California
Cooperative Oceanic
Fisheries Investigations (CalCOFI) program aboard the NOAA ship RV David Starr Jordan. The CalCOFI program
was organized in the late 1940’s to study the causes of
variations in
population size of fishes of importance to the State of California. It is carried out by
NOAA’s National Marine
Fisheries Service Southwest Fisheries Science Center, the California
Department
of Fish and Game, and the Marine Life Research Group (MLRG) at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography (SIO).
MLRG
contributes to this program by investigations of the physical, chemical
and
biological structure of the California Current. Data from the cruises
were
collected and processed by personnel of the Marine Life Research Group
and the
Southwest Fisheries Science Center.
Volunteers and other SIO staff members also assisted in
the collection
of data and chemical analyses at sea. CalCOFI data presented in this
report and
collected on previous cruises can be accessed via the World Wide Web
(http://www.calcofi.org).
STANDARD
PROCEDURES
CTD/Rosette
Cast Data
At each station on these cruises a
Sea-Bird Electronics, Inc., Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD)
instrument was
deployed with a 24-place rosette.
The
rosette was equipped with 24 ten-liter plastic (PVC) bottles. The CTD/rosette cast
usually sampled 20
depths to a maximum sampling depth of 525 meters, bottom depth
permitting. Occasional
stations have multiple bottles
tripped at the same depth to provide more water for ancillary programs.
The
sample spacing was designed to sample depth intervals as close as 10
meters
around the sharp upper thermocline features such as the chlorophyll,
oxygen,
nitrite maxima and the shallow salinity minimum.
Salinity, oxygen and nutrients were determined at sea for
all
depths sampled. Chlorophyll-a and
phaeopigments were determined at sea within the top 200 meters, bottom
depth
permitting.
Pressures and temperatures assigned to the
water sample data were derived from the CTD signals recorded just prior
to the
bottle trip. Pressures
have been
converted to depths by the Saunders (1981) pressure-to-depth conversion
technique. CTD
temperatures reported
with the bottle data have been rounded to the nearest hundredth of a
degree
Celsius.
Salinity samples were collected from all
rosette bottles and analyzed at sea using a Guildline model 8410
Portasal
salinometer. Salinity
samples were
drawn in to 200 ml Kimax high-alumina borosilicate bottles that were
rinsed
three times with sample prior to filling.
The results were compared with the CTD salinity in order
to verify that
the rosette bottle did not mis-trip or leak.
The salinometer was standardized before and after each
group of samples
with substandard seawater. Periodic
checks on the conductivity of the substandard were made by comparison
with
IAPSO Standard Seawater batch P134.
Salinity values have been calculated using the algorithms
for the
Practical Salinity Scale, 1978 (UNESCO, 1981a) and were reported to
three
decimal places, provided that accepted standards were met.
Dissolved oxygen samples were collected
in calibrated 100 ml iodine flasks, allowing at least 200% overflow. The dissolved oxygen
samples were analyzed
at sea by the Winkler method, as modified by Carpenter (1965), using
the
equipment and procedure outlined by Anderson (1971).
Percent oxygen saturation was calculated from the
equations of
Weiss (1970).
Nutrient samples were analyzed at sea for dissolved silicate, phosphate, nitrate and nitrite using procedures similar to those described in Gordon et al., 1993. Samples were collected in 45 ml high-density polypropylene screw-capped tubes which were rinsed three times prior to filling. Standardizations were done at the beginning and end of each group of samples with a set of mid-concentration range standards prepared fresh for each run. Samples
_________________________________
* The first two digits represent the
year and the
last digits the month of the cruise.
not analyzed immediately after collection were refrigerated and run the following day. Sets of six different concentration standards were analyzed periodically to determine the deviation from linearity as a function of concentration, primarily for the silicate and nitrate analyses. Final sample concentrations were corrected for deviations from linearity.
Samples for chlorophyll-a
and phaeopigments were collected in
calibrated 138 ml polyethylene bottles and filtered onto Whatman GF/F
filters. The
pigments were extracted
with a cold extraction technique in 90% acetone (Venrick and Hayward,
1984),
and the fluorescence determined before and after acidification with a
Turner Designs
Fluorometer Model 10-005 R on cruise 0101 and a Turner Designs
Fluorometer
Model 10-AU-005-CE on cruise 0104 (Yentsch and Menzel, 1963;
Holm-Hansen et al., 1965). Inexperience with the new
Turner Designs fluorometer on cruise
0104 lead to the loss of several chlorophyll samples.
Evaluation of the water sample data
involved comparisons with the CTD cast profiles, adjacent stations and
consideration of the variation of a property as a function of density
or depth
and the relationships with other properties (Klein, 1973). Estimates of precision of
the standard
techniques are given in SIO (1991).
Primary
Productivity Sampling
Primary productivity samples were taken
each day shortly before local apparent noon (LAN). Primary production
was
estimated from 14C uptake using a
simulated in situ technique. Light penetration was
estimated from the
Secchi depth (assuming that the 1% light level is three times the
Secchi
depth). The depths
with ambient light
intensities corresponding to light levels simulated by the on-deck
incubators
were identified and sampled on the up rosette cast.
Occasionally an extra bottle or two were tripped in
addition to
the usual 20 levels sampled in the combined rosette-productivity cast
in order
to maintain the normal sampling depth resolution.
The ten-liter bottles were equipped with epoxy-coated
springs and
Viton O-rings. Triplicate
samples (two
light and one dark control) were drawn from each productivity sample
depth into
250 ml polycarbonate incubation bottles.
Samples were inoculated with 10 µCi of 14C as NaHCO3 (200
µl of 50 µCi/ml stock) prepared in a 0.3 g/liter
solution of sodium carbonate
(Fitzwater et al., 1982). Samples were incubated
from LAN to civil
twilight in seawater-cooled incubators with neutral-density screens
which
simulate in situ light levels. At the end of the
incubation, the samples
were filtered onto Millipore HA filters and placed in scintillation
vials. One half ml
of 10% HCl was added to each
sample. The sample
was then allowed to
sit, without a cap, at room temperature for 12 hours (after Lean and
Burnison,
1979). Following
this, 10 ml of
scintillation fluor were added to each sample and the samples were
returned to
SIO where the radioactivity was determined with a scintillation counter. Salinity, oxygen,
nutrients, chlorophyll-a and
phaeopigments were determined from
all rosette productivity bottles.
Macrozooplankton
Net Tows
Macrozooplankton was sampled with a 71 cm
mouth diameter paired net (bongo net) equipped with 0.505µm
plankton mesh. Bottom
depth permitting, the nets were towed
obliquely from 210 meters to the surface.
The tow time for a standard tow was 21.5 minutes. Volumes filtered were
determined from
flowmeter readings and the mouth area of the net.
Only one sample of each pair was retained and preserved. The biomass, as wet
displacement volume,
after removal of large (>5 ml) organisms, was determined in the
laboratory
ashore. These
procedures are summarized
in greater detail in Kramer et al.
(1972). An Optical
Plankton Counter
(OPC) was routinely used in one side of the paired bongo net frame. The purpose of the OPC is
to obtain
information on the vertical distributions of size categories of
zooplankton,
using data from the counter, without affecting the ongoing time series
of data
obtained from the catches of the integrative bongo net.
Avifauna
Observations
Sea
birds were counted within
a 300-meter wide strip off to one side of the ship.
Counts were made while underway between stations during
periods
of daylight. These
counts were summed
over 20 nautical mile (nm) intervals, or the distance between
consecutive
stations, whichever was less. Included
at the end of this report are individual maps of the most numerous bird
species
(individuals/nm).
Ancillary Programs
Several ancillary programs produced data
on these cruises that are not presented in this report. These programs
include:
1)
Underway
Data. Seawater
was pumped onboard
the ship by two separate pumps using two different flow systems.
Continuous
near surface measurements of temperature, salinity and chlorophyll
fluorescence
were recorded from water pumped through the ship’s
uncontaminated seawater
system. The data
were logged at
one-minute intervals. Pelagic
fish eggs
were collected underway throughout the entire CalCOFI pattern with a
separate
large volume pump system. This pump drew a continuous subsurface sample
of
approximately 640 liters per minute, which was concentrated and then
collected
by a 505µm sieve. Subsamples
were taken
at intervals ranging from 10 to 30 minutes, depending on the egg
concentration,
for enumeration of all retained fish eggs.
On Cruise 0104 the underway sampling of physical and
chemical properties
as well as egg pumping extended north of the usual CalCOFI cruise track
to
sample lines 60, 63, 67, 70 and 73 from the most shoreward stations
offshore to
station 80 on each line.
2)
ADCP.
Continuous profiles of ocean currents and acoustic
backscatter between
20 and 400 meters deep were measured along the shiptrack from a
hull-mounted 150
kHz Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler (ADCP). The ADCP data were
averaged over
3-minute intervals. Sixty 8-meter depth bins were recorded.
TABULATED
DATA
CTD/Rosette
Cast Data
The time reported is the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) of the first rosette bottle trip on the up cast. The rosette bottles tripped on the up cast are reported as cast 2, where cast 1 is considered to be the down CTD cast. The sample number reported is the cast number followed by a two-digit rosette bottle number. Bottom depths, determined acoustically, have been corrected using British Admiralty Tables (Carter, 1980) and are reported in meters. Weather conditions have been coded using WMO code 4501. Secchi depths are reported for most daylight stations.
Observed data from individual CTD/rosette trip levels are interpolated and reported for standard depths. Interpolated or extrapolated standard level data are noted by the footnote “ISL” printed after the depth. Multiple bottles tripped at the same depth to provide water for ancillary programs are not used in the calculation of standard depth data. Density-related parameters have been calculated from the International Equation of State of Seawater 1980 (UNESCO, 1981b). Computed values of potential temperature, sigma-theta, specific volume anomaly (SVA), and dynamic height or geopotential anomaly are included with both observed and interpolated standard depth levels.
On stations where primary productivity
samples were drawn a footnote appears after each productivity depth
sampled. The
corresponding primary
productivity data are reported in a separate section following the
tabulated
rosette cast data.
Primary
Productivity Data
In addition to the normal hydrographic
data also reported in the rosette cast data section, the tabulated data
include: the in situ light levels
at
which the samples were collected, the uptake from each of the replicate
light
bottles, uptake 1 and uptake 2 (which have been corrected for dark
uptake by
subtracting the dark value), the mean of the two uptake values and the
dark
uptake. The uptake
values are totals
for the incubation period. Also
shown
are the times of LAN, civil twilight, and the value of the mean uptake
integrated from the surface to the deepest sample, assuming the
shallowest
value continues to the surface and that negative values (when dark
uptake
exceeds light uptake) are zero. The
uptake data have been presented to two significant digits (values
<1.00) or
one decimal (values >1.00).
Precision of the higher production values
may not warrant all of
the digits presented.
Incubation
time,
LAN, and civil twilight are given in local Pacific Standard Time (PST);
to
convert to UTC, add eight hours to the PST time.
Incubation light intensities are listed in a footnote at
the
bottom of each page.
Macrozooplankton
Data
Macrozooplankton biomass volumes are
tabulated as total biomass volume (cm3/1000m3
strained)
and as the
total volume minus the volume of larger organisms under the heading
“Small.” Tow
times are given in local PST (+8) time.
FOOTNOTES
In
addition to footnotes, special notations are used without footnotes
because the
meaning is always the same:
D:
CTD salinity value listed in place of normal shipboard
salinity analysis.
ISL:
After a depth value indicates that this is
an interpolated or extrapolated standard level.
U:
Uncertain value. Values
which
are not used in interpolation because they seem to be in error without
apparent reason.