Automated Author Profile

Danielson, Seth L.

University of Alaska Fairbanks

Current S-Index

0.7

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

0.4

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

2

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

15.4%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

0

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Discrete water samples collected from the Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD) rosette at specific depths, Research Vessel Sikuliaq, Northern Bering Sea to Chukchi Sea, 2024

The Pacific sector of the Arctic Ocean is experiencing major reductions in seasonal sea ice extent and increases in sea surface temperatures. One of the key uncertainties in this region is how the marine ecosystem will respond to seasonal shifts in the timing of spring sea ice retreat and/or delays in fall sea ice formation. Variations in upper ocean water hydrography, planktonic production, pelagic-benthic coupling and sediment carbon cycling are all influenced by sea ice and temperature change. To more systematically track the broad biological response to sea ice retreat and associated environmental change, an international consortium of scientists have developed a coordinated Distributed Biological Observatory (DBO) that includes selected biological measurements at multiple trophic levels, along with satellite and mooring measurements. The DBO currently focuses on five regional biological "hotspot" locations along a latitudinal gradient that allows for consistent sampling and monitoring at five biologically productive locations across a latitudinal gradient: DBO 1 (SLIP)-south of St. Lawrence Island (SLI), DBO2 (Chirikov)-north of SLI, DBO3 (southern Chukchi Sea), DBO4-NE Chukchi Sea,and DBO5-Barrow Canyon.

Authors

  • Cooper, Lee W. ;
  • Grebmeier, Jacqueline M. ;
  • Danielson, Seth L.
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.3 Dataset Index
10.18739/a23j3932sJanuary 2025

Discrete water samples collected from the Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD) rosette at specific depths, Research Vessel Sikuliaq, Northern Bering Sea to Chukchi Sea, 2021

The Pacific sector of the Arctic Ocean is experiencing major reductions in seasonal sea ice extent and increases in sea surface temperatures. One of the key uncertainties in this region is how the marine ecosystem will respond to seasonal shifts in the timing of spring sea ice retreat and/or delays in fall sea ice formation. Variations in upper ocean water hydrography, planktonic production, pelagic-benthic coupling and sediment carbon cycling are all influenced by sea ice and temperature change. To more systematically track the broad biological response to sea ice retreat and associated environmental change, an international consortium of scientists have developed a coordinated Distributed Biological Observatory (DBO) that includes selected biological measurements at multiple trophic levels, along with satellite and mooring measurements. The DBO currently focuses on five regional biological "hotspot" locations along a latitudinal gradient that allows for consistent sampling and monitoring at five biologically productive locations across a latitudinal gradient: DBO 1 (SLIP)-south of St. Lawrence Island (SLI), DBO2 (Chirikov)-north of SLI, DBO3 (southern Chukchi Sea), DBO4-NE Chukchi Sea,and DBO5-Barrow Canyon.

Authors

  • Cooper, Lee W. ;
  • Grebmeier, Jacqueline M. ;
  • Danielson, Seth L.
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.4 Dataset Index
10.18739/a2xd0r04qJanuary 2024