| At the 2010 PICES Annual Meeting in Portland, OR,
U.S.A., it was announced that the Station Papa / Line-P monitoring
program was the recipient of the 3rd
POMA Award . The presentation ceremony took place
on October 25, 2010, during the PICES-2010 Opening Session and was
conducted by Drs. Tokio Wada (PICES Chairman) and John Stein (PICES
Science Board Chairman). A commemorative plaque and a certificate
were presented to Dr. William Crawford who accepted the award Dr.
William Crawford (Head of the State of the Ocean section
at the Institute of Ocean Sciences at Fisheries and Oceans Canada)
who accepted the award on behalf of the thousands of people, past
and present, who contributed to the Station Papa/Line-P monitoring
program for the past six decades.
Photo
album [pdf, 1.7 Mb] |
| Science Board citation for the 2010
POMA Award |
The PICES Ocean Monitoring Service Award (POMA) was established to recognize
organizations, groups and outstanding individuals that have contributed
significantly to the advancement of marine science in the North
Pacific through long-term ocean monitoring, data management and
communication. And it is with great pleasure for me to announce
that the 2010 POMA award goes to the Station Papa/Line-P monitoring
program.
The seeds that grew into Line-P were sown during the Second
World War. With the increase in the number of trans-Pacific flights,
there was a need to monitor marine weather systems in the North
Pacific. In 1943, the first vessel to occupy Station Peter, as it
was then known, was the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Haida,
and since then many ships have occupied Line-P and Station Papa.
The first hydrographic casts at the station began in 1959, and this
was the start of Line-P observations. And for the past 60 years,
Ocean Station Papa and Line-P have contributed to the region’s
only multi-decadal time series of oceanographic conditions for the
Northeast Pacific Ocean. Today, the Line-P oceanographic sampling
program is comprised of 27 hydrographic stations leading to Station
Papa, and forms the backbone for cutting-edge, multi-disciplinary
research on ocean dynamics, biology and chemistry.
Throughout its history, the rich data provided by this unique
monitoring program have given scientists around the world opportunities
to revolutionize the field of ocean science and participate in international
projects that probe today’s most pressing challenges in the
physics, biology and chemistry of the ocean—including studies
of El Niño, ocean storms, and iron enrichment. The long-term
surveys along Line-P have also served as an integral component of
global reports on the dynamics and status of our oceans, as well
as a training ground for the next generation of oceanographers who
have completed (or someday imagine completing) graduate research
degrees on Line-P.
The Line-P archive provides a unique picture of the mean state
in one part of our global oceans, and has proven critical in developing
our ideas of how the ocean evolves. There are far too many people
involved in this monitoring program to list. But there are managers
who have ensured excellence in ocean sampling along Line-P. In chronological
order, they are John P. Tully to whom we owe the original concept,
Sus Tabata who years ago showed the power of a long time series,
Frank Whitney who managed the program as it expanded to become a
training ground for students and PhD theses, and finally, Marie
Robert, who is presently juggling the myriad of demands from many
universities and other research laboratories.
Please join me in congratulating Dr. Bill Crawford, Head of
the State of the Ocean section at the Institute of Ocean Sciences
at Fisheries and Oceans Canada, who is receiving the 2010 POMA Award
on behalf of the thousands of people, past and present, who contributed
to the Station Papa/Line-P monitoring program for the past six decades.
Their sustained efforts, extraordinary vision, and dedicated leadership
have built an invaluable resource that captures the changing biophysical
conditions of the North Pacific and have had a profound impact on
the development of ocean science.
|
| Dr. Crawford's acceptance
speech |
Thank you, Drs. Wada and Stein. What a surprising
and amazing honor! I am especially humbled given the outstanding scientific
talent in the PICES community and that represented by the previous
awardees. This award is especially significant to me for several reasons.
In the late 1980s, we observed ecosystem changes in the Hawaiian Archipelago
and invited Dr. Wooster to Hawaii to help us develop a research program
to understand those changes. Thus, Dr. Wooster's guidance helped shape
the direction of much of my subsequent research on decadal variation.
Secondly, while much of my research focuses on the subtropical ecosystem
south of the PICES geographic area of interest, the PICES community
represents my intellectual home. Its approach of addressing large
spatial-scale dynamics, physical-biological linkages, and complete
ecosystems has always had great appeal to me. Lastly, I would like
to acknowledge that my achievements are the result of contributions
from many wonderful colleagues, mentors, and co-authors, and I am
truly grateful to the collaborations over many years with the talented
staff of the Ecosystems and Oceanography Division of the Pacific Islands
Fisheries Science Center. |