Lisa Werner: Introduction to OREGON (Not Alaska!) – August 29, 2024

NOAA Teacher at Sea

Lisa Werner

Aboard NOAA Ship Bell M. Shimada

August 29 – September 13, 2024

Mission: Expanding Pacific Research and Exploration of Submerged Systems (EXPRESS) Project

Geographic Area of Cruise: Pacific Coast, near Southern Oregon and Northern California

Date: August 29, 2024

Weather Data (Newport, OR)

Date: 08/29/2024
Time: 0730
Latitude: 44.6°N
Longitude: 124.05°W

Science and Technology Log

Originally I was scheduled to be a part of NOAA Ship Fairweather‘s hydrography mission, but ship repairs have changed my assignment. I am now going to be on NOAA Ship Bell M. Shimada, working on the EXPRESS mission. EXPRESS stands for Expanding Pacific Research and Exploitation of Submerged Systems.

This project has three main goals:

  1. To guide wise use of living and non-living marine resources,
  2. To inform potential offshore energy decisions, and
  3. To improve offshore earthquake, landslide, tsunami, and nautical hazard assessments.

One of the main aspects of this larger project that I will be experiencing will be the use of an autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) named Popoki. I am incredibly excited to see the variety of experiments being done for this project!

Before we get going on the project, I had the great fortune of getting a tour of the NOAA Fisheries Lab (part of the Northwest Fisheries Science Center) and the Hatfield Marine Science Center with Alicia Billings, a Fishery Research Biologist. Alicia showed me where her office and work spaces are, taught me about how fish ages are figured out by counting the growth bands of the otoliths (“Ear stones”), and taught me a lot about the nets used for her studies on Pacific Hake. She had just gotten back from being at sea aboard NOAA Ship Bell M. Shimada, so she had a lot of insights as to how the time at sea works and how much the scientists look forward to being able to work in the ocean environment.

close-up photo of a printed poster or bookpage. This section is titled Pacific Hake: Maximum age: 25 years. There is a photo of a hake resting on the seafloor, and two magnified images of otolith crossections.
Pacific Hake otolith example – note the rings to count!

I also had the opportunity to visit the Oregon Coast Aquarium, which had some incredible touch tanks and viewing tunnels showing the marine life of Oregon. I was able to find answers to many of the homework questions the students I teach gave me before I left (mainly about the octopus, crab, and jellyfish populations!)

Oregon Coast Aquarium images:
(1) The students I teach really wanted to see how an octopus moves, so they will love the videos I took of this very large octopus! (2) I arrived at the aquarium just in time to see the sea otters being fed. (3) One of the 3 tunnels that immerses visitors in the sea life of Oregon.

We leave port later today, and I cannot wait to see the incredible work being done!

Personal Log

I am very excited to be sailing aboard NOAA Ship Bell M. Shimada. I am so grateful to Emily Susko for arranging this quick change (while on her week off of work) so that I could still be a part of the Teacher at Sea program, despite the delays with NOAA Ship Fairweather.

Lisa, wearing her Teacher at Sea hat and t-shirt, poses for a photo by pointing excitedly at her nameplate on a wooden door. There are three other nameplates on this door, as well as smaller papers with muster station assignments
My name is on my stateroom door!

The EXPRESS program will be an excellent example of interdepartmental work, as it will feature scientists from NOAA, University of Alaska, and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. Combined with the beautiful partnership between the NOAA Officer Corps (the people who run the ships) and the NOAA science team (the people working on the specific project that sails aboard the ships), it will be great to see how all of these groups of people contribute to the greater project – definitely some great lessons and examples to bring back to the students in our school!

Music Connection

Since it is my belief that music connects to everything, the last section of each blog post will feature connections to music. While I was getting a tour of the beautiful Gladys Valley Marine Studies Building from Alicia, I saw an exhibit on a musical instrument that has been made from hollow bull kelp. There was a listening station where you could hear a hollowed bull kelp being played. The beauty of this instrument is that it is environmentally responsible – the bull kelp wash ashore regularly, so they do not need to be harvested. Kelp decays quickly, so the horn must be played within a week of it washing ashore. The projects displayed were showing the collaboration between music and ecology.