A voyage to the northern Gulf of Mexico

A successful sediment trap recovery!

A successful sediment trap recovery!

Early in February (what now seems like eons ago!), during less infectious times, we went out to sea in the Gulf of Mexico. I’ve written before about our sediment trap project and the papers stemming from it. Unfortunately, however, this trip was the last one under the current funding regime, and our job was to ensure that both our traps came back up to the surface (which they did); we would not be redeploying them. Womp womp. However, we are working towards getting more funding so we can continue monitoring Gulf of Mexico sedimentation (and foraminifera!)

The Gulf of Mexico is an important oceanic body of water for the United States and Mexico for several reasons; climatically, it is an essential moisture source. Sea-surface temperatures in the Gulf can have a significant influence on rainfall and atmospheric circulation over a large swath of North America. It also serves as the ultimate sink for the Mississippi and other large river systems of the US and Mexico. Naturally, you can imagine that the record of sediments preserved in the Gulf of Mexico holds many crucial histories of North American climate change and the myriad of interrelated tales concerning paleoecology, paleoanthropology, archaeology, etc. Of course, some of these secrets have already been unearthed: stories that detail the extent of Laurentide Ice-sheet meltwater routing, mysteries of abrupt climate change, oceanographic implications of cometary impacts, Little Ice Age hydroclimate, and so on... but there are many others in the making and indeed, many more yet to see daylight.

An animation depicting daily sea-surface temperature variability in the Gulf of Mexico from 2012-2013. Notice that the structure of the Loop Current is visible in the temperatures! If you pay attention, you can also see an eddy pinching off. This an…

An animation depicting daily sea-surface temperature variability in the Gulf of Mexico from 2012-2013. Notice that the structure of the Loop Current is visible in the temperatures! If you pay attention, you can also see an eddy pinching off. This animation was taken from the Naval Oceanographic Office website.

But the paleoclimate tales yet-to-be extracted from the Gulf of Mexico are not limited to histories of terrestrial climate change. Oceanographically speaking, the Gulf is highly dynamic - featuring the Loop Current and its energetic (and enigmatic!) process of shedding “eddies”. The Loop Current transports warm and salty waters from the Caribbean Sea through the Yucatán Straits into the Gulf and “loops” eastward, exiting outward through the Florida Straits. While doing so, at times, giant (multiple-kilometer-wide) swirling masses of Loop Current waters (eddies) “pinch off” the primary current and flow westward into the northwestern Gulf of Mexico. These warmer waters have unique parameters (oxygen, salinity, etc.) and contrast with cooler, fresher coastal waters. These eddies are very important for the wellbeing of marine ecosystems in the Gulf. They can also act as heat engines for hurricanes that pass over them (as in Katrina). There’s a lot of debate about the future of the Loop Current and its eddy-shedding system with ongoing anthropogenic warming. I’d argue that paleoceanography is hugely important to this endeavor as reliable observations of these processes are highly limited.

Foraminiferal shells housed in the Gulf of Mexico have the potential to tell these stories. Through their species distribution as well as several chemical signatures stored in their calcite shells, “forams” are important indicators of past oceanic processes. This time around, we were interested in collecting specimens of Globorotalia truncatulinoides. We think this is an ideal species for reconstructing winter climate conditions and wanted to see if we could culture some individuals. Towards this, we dragged a plankton net at a water depth of ~80 m (the truncs live in the sub-surface ocean) and collected many planktic species. Overall, I think we were quite successful, and many of those collected individuals are still alive today (well over a month from the time of collection!)

Here are a couple of photographs from our plankton tow:

Globorotalia truncatulinoides - the species we were after!

Globorotalia menardii - another sub-surface dwelling foraminifera.

Pulleniatina obliquiloculata - a juvenile specimen

Globigerinella calida

Orbulina universa - this was a spectacular specimen of O. universa (amidst copepods) where you can see through the spherical final chamber and observe the secondary whorl of chambers.

And remember things can get rather rocky when you are out to sea and looking under a microscope!

Sediment Traps and Plankton Tows

A very pretty Cocodrie sunset with the R/V Pelican.

Better late than never I suppose, but I wanted to document our short research cruise aboard the R/V Point Sur that happened early last month. It was another routine sediment trap operation, but this one really stood out because we happened to see some really cool critters at sea!

As usual, the northern Gulf of Mexico sediment trap crew (Eric Tappa from the University of South Carolina, Julie Richey and Caitlin Reynolds from the USGS, myself, and another helping hand from Michael Lis, an undergraduate student from UT Austin working with me) made our way down to LUMCON at Cocodrie, Louisiana and boarded the R/V Pelican to start our transit to the sediment trap mooring site. However, things did not go as planned (as is common in the field) and our overnight transit was halted short, as we had already turned back towards port after leaving it only some hours before! It turned out that there were some serious engine problems on the ship which entailed something we could not afford - delays. Luckily, as we were sulking around LUMCON taking an in-depth look at their impressive library, the R/V Point Sur came to our rescue and their crew graciously agreed to charter our operation. 

Relief as the sediment trap comes up to the surface. Picture credit: Michael Lis.

Relief as the sediment trap comes up to the surface. Picture credit: Michael Lis.

This time, apart from sediment trap redeployment operations, we had an additional exciting task: using the plankton tow. A plankton tow is a vital tool used to sample plankton that floats freely in the surface ocean. It is, in essence, a giant net with a fine mesh that we can trawl around and look at what comes up. We intended to sample some plankton at the sediment trap site. In any case, here’s a picture collage of some of the amazing creatures we were lucky enough to catch in our plankton tow:

I'm really excited about the upcoming science from this research trip. Hopefully, we can find some interesting results! Until my next voyage, I will certainly miss being out at sea!

Our Recent Paper in Four Tweets

As promised, this is the tl;dr version of my previous post, where I have tried to reduce our open access paper into four tweet-length snippets per sub-heading. Here goes:

The History: A particular plankton shell used to reconstruct climate is purported to have 2 morphs that live in different depths of the ocean.

The Importance: If true, previous studies that attempt to quantify past oceanic climates from non-selective morphs of that plankton species are biased.

The Study: We analyzed pairs of extreme & intermediate morphs, & with a model, found that all morphs live in the top (<30 m) part of the ocean. 

The Implications: We conclude that morph-based uncertainty in this species when used for studying ancient (Holocene) climates is little-to-none.