Moira Galbraith
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
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Publication
Featured researches published by Moira Galbraith.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2014
Jean-Pierre W. Desforges; Moira Galbraith; Neil Dangerfield; Peter S. Ross
We document the abundance, composition and distribution of microplastics in sub-surface seawaters of the northeastern Pacific Ocean and coastal British Columbia. Samples were acid-digested and plastics were characterized using light microscopy by type (fibres or fragments) and size (<100, 100-500, 500-100 and >1000 μm). Microplastics concentrations ranged from 8 to 9200 particles/m(3); lowest concentrations were in offshore Pacific waters, and increased 6, 12 and 27-fold in west coast Vancouver Island, Strait of Georgia, and Queen Charlotte Sound, respectively. Fibres accounted for ∼ 75% of particles on average, although nearshore samples had more fibre content than offshore (p<0.05). While elevated microplastic concentrations near urban areas are consistent with land-based sources, the high levels in Queen Charlotte Sound appeared to be the result of oceanographic conditions that trap and concentrate debris. This assessment of microplastics in the NE Pacific is of interest in light of the on-coming debris from the 2011 Tohoku Tsunami.
Journal of Oceanography | 2002
David L. Mackas; Moira Galbraith
Zooplankton from coastal/continental margin environments can be transported long distances seaward into the subarctic North Pacific by the large (100–200 km diameter) anticyclonic eddies that form annually in late winter along the eastern margin of the Alaska Gyre. One recurrent region for eddy formation is off the southern tip of the Queen Charlotte Islands (near 52°N 132°W). Eddies from this source region (termed ‘Haida eddies’) propagate westward into open ocean waters during the subsequent 1–3 years, often to about 140°W, occasionally to mid gyre. Each eddy contains a core of anomalously low density water, and produces an upward doming of the sea surface detectable by satellite altimetry, thereby aiding repeated ship-based sampling. The zooplankton community in the eddies is a mixture between shelf/slope species (transported from the nearshore formation region) and subarctic oceanic species (which colonize the eddy from the sides and below). This paper reports sequential observations (late winter, early summer and fall seasons of 2000, and early summer and fall of 2001) of the abundance and distribution of continental-margin zooplankton in the Haida eddies that formed in late winters of 2000 and 2001. Shelf-origin species declined in abundance over time. Species that appeared to have a continental slope origin sometimes declined but sometimes persisted and flourished. Transport and retention within the eddy appeared to be especially effective for species that undergo diel vertical migration.
Environmental Pollution | 2018
J. Mark Hipfner; Moira Galbraith; Strahan Tucker; Katharine R. Studholme; Alice D. Domalik; Scott F. Pearson; Thomas P. Good; Peter S. Ross; Peter Hodum
We assessed the potential role played by two vital Northeastern Pacific Ocean forage fishes, the Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes personatus) and Pacific herring (Clupea pallasii), as conduits for the vertical transfer of microfibres in food webs. We quantified the number of microfibres found in the stomachs of 734 sand lance and 205 herring that had been captured by an abundant seabird, the rhinoceros auklet (Cerorhinca monocerata). Sampling took place on six widely-dispersed breeding colonies in British Columbia, Canada, and Washington State, USA, over one to eight years. The North Pacific Ocean is a global hotspot for pollution, yet few sand lance (1.5%) or herring (2.0%) had ingested microfibres. In addition, there was no systematic relationship between the prevalence of microplastics in the fish stomachs vs. in waters around three of our study colonies (measured in an earlier study). Sampling at a single site (Protection Island, WA) in a single year (2016) yielded most (sand lance) or all (herring) of the microfibres recovered over the 30 colony-years of sampling involved in this study, yet no microfibres had been recovered there, in either species, in the previous year. We thus found no evidence that sand lance and herring currently act as major food-web conduits for microfibres along British Columbias outer coast, nor that the local at-sea density of plastic necessarily determines how much plastic enters marine food webs via zooplanktivores. Extensive urban development around the Salish Sea probably explains the elevated microfibre loads in fishes collected on Protection Island, but we cannot account for the between-year variation. Nonetheless, the existence of such marked interannual variation indicates the importance of measuring year-to-year variation in microfibre pollution both at sea and in marine biota.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2017
J.M. Hipfner; Katharine R. Studholme; Moira Galbraith
We quantified the amount of plastic found in food loads delivered to nestlings in Cassins Auklet (Ptychoramphus aleuticus), a small, zooplanktivorous seabird, on Triangle Island, British Columbia, in 1996-2016. The density of plastic in surrounding waters is moderately high, yet few food loads contained any plastic (3 of 850), and none more than two pieces. That result accords well with previous observations on the other four North Pacific auklets (Aethia spp.), leading us to conclude that true auklets rarely transfer plastic to nestlings. However, many hatch-year Cassins Auklets found dead in coastal British Columbia, Washington and Oregon during the mass mortality event of fall and winter 2014-15 had plastic in their ventriculi. We suggest that these plastic particles would have been obtained at sea after fledging, perhaps while the birds transited south through a region of high plastic density off the west coast of Vancouver Island, Washington and Oregon.
Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2015
Jean-Pierre Desforges; Moira Galbraith; Peter S. Ross
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2005
D.L. Mackas; M. Tsurumi; Moira Galbraith; D.R. Yelland
Progress in Oceanography | 2013
David L. Mackas; Moira Galbraith; Deborah Faust; Diane Masson; Kelly Young; William Shaw; Stephen Romaine; Marc Trudel; John F. Dower; Rob Campbell; Akash R. Sastri; Elizabeth A. Bornhold Pechter; E. A. Pakhomov; Rana W. El-Sabaawi
Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2012
David L. Mackas; Moira Galbraith
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2005
M. Tsurumi; D.L. Mackas; Frank A. Whitney; C. DiBacco; Moira Galbraith; C. S. Wong
Salmon Lice: An Integrated Approach to Understanding Parasite Abundance and Distribution | 2011
Dario Stucchi; Ming Guo; Michael G. G. Foreman; Piotr Czajko; Moira Galbraith; David L. Mackas; Philip A. Gillibrand