

Understanding Ecosystem Processes in the Bering Sea:
First Year Field Highlights from the BEST-BSIERP Partnership
IN 2007, THE NORTH PACIFIC RESEARCH BOARD (NPRB) AND THE
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION (NSF) entered into a historic
partnership to support a comprehensive $52 million investigation of
the eastern Bering Sea ecosystem. This Bering Sea Project
integrates two research programs, the NSF Bering Ecosystem Study
(BEST) and the NPRB Bering Sea Integrated Ecosystem Research Program
(BSIERP). Their common goal is to understand how climate change is
affecting the Bering Sea ecosystem and the consequences of these
changes on lower trophic levels for fish, seabirds, marine mammals,
and ultimately people.
The BEST-BSIERP Bering Sea Project is a 6-year study of the
Bering Sea ecosystem, from the benthos and the atmosphere to human
communities, and everything in between. Nearly a hundred principal
scientists are linked through a vertically integrated process and
modeling program. Field research began in 2007 and reached full
speed the following year, with at-sea sampling conducted from
February through September 2008. The Bering Sea winter ice cover
reached a 30-year high in 2008, and Alaska shivered through a cold
and wet spring and summer. In this article, we present a few select
observations from the first complete field year and highlight some
of the new results.
Read
the complete article (PDF ; 506 KB) |