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Dive into the research topics where Jay O. Peterson is active.

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Featured researches published by Jay O. Peterson.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

River Influences on Shelf Ecosystems: Introduction and synthesis

Barbara M. Hickey; Raphael M. Kudela; Jonathan D. Nash; Kenneth W. Bruland; William T. Peterson; Parker MacCready; Evelyn J. Lessard; David A. Jay; Neil S. Banas; António M. Baptista; Edward P. Dever; P. M. Kosro; L. K. Kilcher; Alexander R. Horner-Devine; Edward D. Zaron; Ryan M. McCabe; Jay O. Peterson; Philip M. Orton; Jiayi Pan; Maeve C. Lohan

[1] River Influences on Shelf Ecosystems (RISE) is the first comprehensive interdisciplinary study of the rates and dynamics governing the mixing of river and coastal waters in an eastern boundary current system, as well as the effects of the resultant plume on phytoplankton standing stocks, growth and grazing rates, and community structure. The RISE Special Volume presents results deduced from four field studies and two different numerical model applications, including an ecosystem model, on the buoyant plume originating from the Columbia River. This introductory paper provides background information on variability during RISE field efforts as well as a synthesis of results, with particular attention to the questions and hypotheses that motivated this research. RISE studies have shown that the maximum mixing of Columbia River and ocean water occurs primarily near plume liftoff inside the estuary and in the near field of the plume. Most plume nitrate originates from upwelled shelf water, and plume phytoplankton species are typically the same as those found in the adjacent coastal ocean. River-supplied nitrate can help maintain the ecosystem during periods of delayed upwelling. The plume inhibits iron limitation, but nitrate limitation is observed in aging plumes. The plume also has significant effects on rates of primary productivity and growth (higher in new plume water) and microzooplankton grazing (lower in the plume near field and north of the river mouth); macrozooplankton concentration (enhanced at plume fronts); offshelf chlorophyll export; as well as the development of a chlorophyll ‘‘shadow zone’’ off northern Oregon.


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2001

Copepod grazing on phytoplankton in the Pacific sector of the Antarctic Polar Front

Juanita Urban-Rich; Michael Dagg; Jay O. Peterson

Abstract Mesozooplankton abundance, community structure and copepod grazing on phytoplankton were examined during the austral spring 1997 and summer 1998 as part of the US JGOFS project in the Pacific sector of the Antarctic polar front. Mesozooplankton abundance and biomass were highest at the polar front and south of the front. Biomass increased by 1.5–2-times during the course of the study. Calanoides acutus, Calanus propinquus, C. simillimus, Rhincalanus gigas and Neocalanus tonsus were the dominant large copepods found in the study. Oithona spp and pteropods were numerically important components of the zooplankton community. The copepod and juvenile krill community consumed 1–7% of the daily chlorophyll standing stock, equivalent to 3–21% of the daily phytoplankton production. There was an increased grazing pressure at night due to both increased gut pigment concentrations as well as increases in zooplankton numbers. Phytoplankton carbon contributed a significant fraction (>50%) of the dietary carbon for the copepods during spring and summer. The relative importance of phytoplankton carbon to the diet increased south of the polar front, suggested that grazing by copepods could be important to organic carbon and biogenic silica flux south of the polar front.


Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology | 1995

The role of photoreception in the swarming behavior of the copepod Dioithona oculata

Edward J. Buskey; Jay O. Peterson; Julie W. Ambler

The copepod Dioithona oculata forms dense swarms near mangrove prop roots that are centered around shafts of light penetrating the mangrove canopy. Swarms can be created in the laboratory within light shafts created with a fiber optic light pipe. Laboratory observations of swarming behavior were recorded using video cameras, and the swimming behavior of the copepods and density of the swarms were quantified using video-computer motion and image analysis techniques. Swarm formation results from a combination of phototactic and klino-kinetic behavior. Dark adapted copepods initially exhibit a photophobic response to a light shaft, but become positively phototactic within 3-5 min after exposure to the light. Copepod aggregation rates under the light fit a saturation model, suggesting that copepods are attracted independently to the swarm marker. Copepods reverse their swimming direction when they encounter light intensity gradients near the edge of a light shaft, which aids in maintaining the swarm. Swarm formation can occur in the laboratory at light intensities as slow as 0.1 μM photons m-2 s-1, which is similar to light intensities at dawn when they are first observed to form in nature. Swarm formation appears to have an endogenous rhythm, as copepods will not form swarms at night under a light shaft.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Initiation and Development of a Toxic and Persistent Pseudo-nitzschia Bloom off the Oregon Coast in Spring/Summer 2015

Xiuning Du; William T. Peterson; Jennifer L. Fisher; Matt Hunter; Jay O. Peterson

In spring/summer 2015, a toxic bloom by the diatom Pseudo-nitzschia (PN) occurred along the west coast of the United States which led to closures of the harvest of razor clams and Dungeness crabs. Twice monthly observations of temperature, salinity, nutrients, chlorophyll and phytoplankton species composition allowed us to track oceanographic conditions preceding and during the development of the bloom. PN cells were first detected during late winter 2015. A PN bloom was initiated following the onset of coastal upwelling in mid-April; subsequent peaks in May and June were sustained by episodic upwelling events and reached magnitudes of 105 cells/L and 106 cells/L, 40% and 90% of the total diatom abundance, respectively. The bloom temporarily crashed in July due to a lack of upwelling, but PN cells increased again in August due to a resumption of upwelling, albeit with lower magnitude. Macronutrient conditions prior to this bloom likely played a critical role in triggering the bloom and its toxicity (particularly silicic acid limitation stress). Nutrient stress preceding the toxic bloom was related to two oceanographic events: an anomalously warm and thick water mass that occupied the northern North Pacific from September 2014 through 2015 leading to a highly-stratified water column, and the drawdown of nitrate and silicic acid during an unusually intense winter phytoplankton bloom in February and early March 2015.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2009

A novel method for determination of aragonite saturation state on the continental shelf of central Oregon using multi-parameter relationships with hydrographic data

Lauren W. Juranek; Richard A. Feely; William T. Peterson; Simone R. Alin; Burke Hales; Kitack Lee; Christopher L. Sabine; Jay O. Peterson


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2003

The potential contribution of fecal pellets from large copepods to the flux of biogenic silica and particulate organic carbon in the Antarctic Polar Front region near 170°W

Michael J. Dagg; Juanita Urban-Rich; Jay O. Peterson


Limnology and Oceanography | 1996

he swarming behavior of the copepod Dioithona oculata: In situ and laboratory studies

Edward J. Buskey; Jay O. Peterson; Julie W. Ambler


Limnology and Oceanography | 2001

Mesoscale variability of physical and biological fields in southeastern Lake Superior

Meng Zhou; Yiwu Zhu; Shawn Putnam; Jay O. Peterson


Archive | 2010

STATE OF THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT 2009-2010: REGIONAL VARIATION PERSISTS THROUGH TRANSITION FROM LA NIÑA TO EL NIÑO (AND BACK?)

Eric P. Bjorkstedt; Ralf Goericke; Sam McClatchie; Edward D. Weber; William Watson; Nancy Lo; Bill Peterson; B Emmett; Jay O. Peterson; Reginaldo Durazo; Gilberto Gaxiola-Castro; Francisco P. Chavez; Jt Pennington; Curtis A. Collins; John C. Field; Keith M. Sakuma; Steven J. Bograd; Franklin B. Schwing; Y Xue; William J. Sydeman; Sarah Ann Thompson; Jarrod A. Santora; John L. Largier; Chris Halle; Steven G. Morgan; Sy Kim; Kpb Merkens; John A. Hildebrand; Lisa Munger


California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations Reports | 2011

State of the California Current 2010-2011: Regionally Variable Responses to a Strong (But Fleeting?) La Nina

Eric P. Bjorkstedt; Ralf Goericke; Sam McClatchie; Edward D. Weber; William Watson; Nancy Lo; Bill Peterson; Bob Emmett; Ric Brodeur; Jay O. Peterson; Marisa N. C. Litz; José Goméz-Valdéz; Gilberto Gaxiola-Castro; Bertha E. Lavaniegos; Francisco P. Chavez; Curtis A. Collins; John C. Field; Keith M. Sakuma; Pete Warzybok; Russell W. Bradley; Jaime Jahncke; Steven J. Bograd; Franklin B. Schwing; Gregory S. Campbell; John A. Hildebrand; William J. Sydeman; Sarah Ann Thompson; John L. Largier; Chris Halle; Sung Yong Kim

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William T. Peterson

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Steven J. Bograd

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Edward D. Weber

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Eric P. Bjorkstedt

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Francisco P. Chavez

Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute

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Keith M. Sakuma

National Marine Fisheries Service

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Ralf Goericke

University of California

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Sam McClatchie

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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