Elizabeth Logerwell
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
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Publication
Featured researches published by Elizabeth Logerwell.
Polar Biology | 2011
Kimberly M. Rand; Elizabeth Logerwell
This study represents the first demersal trawl survey of marine fishes and invertebrates in offshore waters of the Beaufort Sea since 1977. Species composition, distribution, and abundance of demersal fish and benthic invertebrates were assessed with standard methods and demersal trawl gear by the Alaska Fisheries Science Center. Fishes made up 6% of the total catch weight, and invertebrates made up the remaining 94% of the catch weight. A total of 32 species of fish were identified, two taxa were identified to genus and one to family, and 174 taxa of invertebrates were identified. The most abundant demersal fishes were polar cod (Boreogadus saida), eelpouts (Lycodes spp.), Bering flounder (Hippoglossoides robustus), and walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma). The most abundant invertebrates were notched brittle stars (Ophiura sarsi), snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio), mussels (Musculus spp.), and the mudstar (Ctenodiscus crispatus). We documented or confirmed extension to the known ranges of four species of fishes: walleye pollock, Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus), festive snailfish (Liparis marmoratus), and eyeshade sculpin (Nautichthys pribilovius). We also documented the presence of commercial-sized snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio), which has not previously been recorded in the North American Arctic.
Polar Biology | 2011
Elizabeth Logerwell; Kimberly M. Rand; Thomas J. Weingartner
We relate the spatial variability in the distribution of benthic taxa of the Beaufort Sea to oceanographic characteristics of their habitat with the goal of illustrating potential mechanisms linking climate change to Arctic marine communities. Offshore fish of the Beaufort Sea have not been surveyed since 1977 and no synchronous measures of fish distribution and the oceanographic characteristics of their habitat have been made previously. A survey was conducted during August 2008 in the western Beaufort Sea, Alaska. The distribution and abundance of benthic fish and invertebrates were assessed with standard bottom trawl survey methods. Oceanographic data were collected at each trawl station and at several locations between stations. The dominant benthic taxa, Polar cod (Boreogadus saida), eelpouts (Lycodes sp.), and snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio) were associated with cold (<−1.5°C), high salinity (>33) water found offshore of the shelf break, derived from the Chukchi Sea. These waters are expected to be high in secondary productivity, such that we hypothesize that the distribution of fish and crab was driven by conditions favorable for successful foraging. Predictions of the impacts of climate change require an understanding of the mechanisms linking the distribution and abundance of marine organisms to their oceanographic habitat. Our study documents the association of dominant benthic fish and invertebrates of the Beaufort Sea with specific water mass types and is thus a step toward this understanding.
Archive | 2014
Sue E. Moore; Elizabeth Logerwell; Lisa B. Eisner; Edward V. Farley; Lois A. Harwood; Kathy J. Kuletz; James R. Lovvorn; James R. Murphy; Lori T. Quakenbush
Extreme reductions in sea ice extent and thickness in the Pacific Arctic Region (PAR) have become a hallmark of climate change over the past decade, but their impact on the marine ecosystem is poorly understood. As top predators, marine fishes, birds and mammals (collectively, upper trophic level species, or UTL) must adapt via biological responses to physical forcing and thereby become sentinels to ecosystem variability and reorganization. Although there have been no coordinated long-term studies of UTL species in the PAR, we provide a compilation of information for each taxa as an ecological foundation from which future investigations can benefit. Subsequently, we suggest a novel UTL-focused research framework focused on measurable responses of UTL species to environmental variability as one way to ascertain shifts in the PAR marine ecosystem. In the PAR, indigenous people rely on UTL species for subsistence and cultural foundation. As such, marine fishes, birds and mammals represent a fundamental link to local communities while simultaneously providing a nexus for science, policy, education and outreach for people living within and outside the PAR.
Polar Biology | 2013
Kimberly M. Rand; Andy Whitehouse; Elizabeth Logerwell; Ernestine Ahgeak; Richard Hibpshman; Sandra L. Parker-Stetter
Polar cod (Boreogadus saida) play an integral part in the Arctic ecosystems linking the upper and lower trophic levels. Though their estimated biomass is considerable, recent knowledge of their diets in the US Beaufort Sea is sparse. Collections of polar cod from the US Beaufort Sea were made during August 2008 using demersal and pelagic trawls. Polar cod diet composition was quantified as percent prey weight, percent prey count, and frequency of occurrence of prey. The diet composition between the demersal- and pelagic-captured cod showed differences in all these categories. Polar cod captured in the demersal nets primarily fed on fish (by weight), and pelagic cod primarily fed on copepods (frequency of occurrence) and euphausiids (by weight). In general, these dominant preys are different than what has been reported in other studies describing polar cod diets.
Archive | 2017
Steven J. Barbeaux; Diana Elizabeth Fraser; Lowell W. Fritz; Elizabeth Logerwell
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Fisheries Oceanography | 2001
Elizabeth Logerwell; Paul E. Smith
Oceanography | 2011
Michael F. Sigler; Martin Renner; Seth L. Danielson; Lisa B. Eisner; Robert R. Lauth; Kathy J. Kuletz; Elizabeth Logerwell; George L. Hunt
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2007
Elizabeth Logerwell; Phyllis J. Stabeno; Christopher D. Wilson; Anne B. Hollowed
Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2004
Elizabeth Logerwell; Christopher D. Wilson
Fisheries Oceanography | 2010
Elizabeth Logerwell; Janet T. Duffy-Anderson; Matthew T. Wilson; Denise R. McKelvey