GLOBEC Research Opportunity
Dear Colleague,
U.S. GLOBEC, with funding support from the National Science Foundation and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations Coastal Ocean Program and National Marine Fisheries Service, announces the availability of funds to support research in the Northeast Pacific Ocean. The Request for Proposals (RFP) is being released by NOAA and will appear shortly in the Federal Register. Deadline for proposal submission to NOAA is April 15, 1999. A version of the NOAA announcement can be obtained from the National U.S. GLOBEC web site.
I am sending this message to all US scientists whose emails are contained within the master U.S. GLOBEC mailing list. Please pass it on to others who might be interested.
Details of how to apply for the funds are spelled out in the announcement.
Sincerely,
Harold P. Batchelder
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE / National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Request for Proposals for the Global Ocean Ecosystems Dynamics (GLOBEC) Project
AGENCY: Coastal Ocean Program, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Dept. of Commerce.
ACTION: Supplemental Notice for Financial Assistance for Project Grants.
NOTICE: This is a DRAFT document provided in advance of the official release to be published subsequently in the US Federal Register. The contents of this forthcoming OFFICIAL NOTIFICATION supercede any / all conflicts with the current presentation of the document.
SUMMARY: The NOAA Coastal Ocean Program (COP) is soliciting proposals for the Global Ocean Ecosystems Dynamics (GLOBEC) Project. This program is a federal research partnership with the National Science Foundation (NSF - Directorate for Geosciences, Division of Ocean Sciences). For complete Program Description and Other Requirements criteria, see COP's General Grant Administration Terms and Conditions initial notice in the Federal Register--63 FR44237, dated August l8, 1998, and also at http://www.cop.noaa.gov/.
DATES: The deadline for proposals is April 15, 1999 by 15:00 local time. It is anticipated that final recommendations for awards will be made by October 1, 1999.
ADDRESSES: NOAA Standard Form Applications with instructions are accessible on the following COP Internet Site: NOAA Standard Form Applications
Submit the original and two copies of your proposal to the Coastal Ocean Program office at the following address:
Coastal Ocean Program Office (GLOBEC 99)
SSMC#3, 9th Floor, Station 9700
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910B
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions or require further technical information, contact;
Dr. Beth Turner, GLOBEC Program Manager
Coastal Ocean Program Office
301-713-3338/ext 135
E-mail: Elizabeth.Turner@noaa.gov
or
Dr. Phillip Taylor
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences
703-306-1584
E-mail: prtaylor@nsf.gov
For Business Management Information, contact:
Leslie McDonald
COP Grants Office
(301) 713-3338/ext 137
E-mail: Leslie.McDonald@noaa.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background:
Research activities in the coastal Northeast Pacific (NEP) Ocean are supported by a number of organizations including the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Ocean Sciences (OCE), and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Coastal Ocean Program (COP) and National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). NSF/OCE generally supports research projects focused on basic oceanographic and ecological processes and the study of natural systems. A component of NOAA's COP focus is directed towards developing tools and capabilities to improve ecosystem management and NOAA/NMFS manages the nation's living marine resources. Environmental and resource management decisions are most appropriately based on knowledge gained from both basic and applied research.
Global Ocean Ecosystems Dynamics (U.S. GLOBEC) is a component of the U.S. Global Change Research Program, with the goals of understanding and ultimately predicting how populations of marine animal species (holozooplankton, fish and benthic invertebrates) respond to natural and anthropogenic changes in global climate. U.S. GLOBEC is also the U.S. component of the GLOBEC International program, a core project of the IGBP (International Geosphere-Biosphere Program), with co-sponsorship from the Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research (SCOR) and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC).
This notice is under the auspices of the Global Ocean Ecosystems Dynamics (U.S. GLOBEC) program within NSF/OCE and the regional ecosystem studies and U.S. GLOBEC initiatives of NOAA's COP. U.S. GLOBEC has identified ecosystem studies in the California Current System (CCS) and Coastal Gulf of Alaska (CGOA) as priorities for the next decade. This notice requests proposals for;
(1) Process-oriented field studies in the CCS
(2) Mesoscale surveys in the CCS
(3) Long-term observation projects in the CCS
(4) Modeling studies in the CCS and the CGOA
(5) Retrospective studies in the CCS and the CGOA.
To provide for long-term coordinated strategic planning of the NEP program in the CCS, proposals are being solicited now for all future U.S. GLOBEC research activities in the CCS. This includes process-study research in the two field phases of the CCS program. At this time, the major field process years are anticipated to occur in 2000 and 2002, contingent on the availability of funding. In the event that sufficient funding is not available to support a full field program in 2000, the field years will be delayed a year, occurring in 2001 and 2003, respectively.
It is anticipated that a similar announcement will be issued approximately one year from now requesting research proposals for NEP studies in the CGOA, with field years in 2001 and 2003. In the event of a delay in the CCS program, the CGOA activities would be similarly delayed. RESEARCH PROPOSALS FOR FIELD WORK (LONG-TERM OBSERVATIONS, MESOSCALE SURVEYS, PROCESS-STUDIES) SOLELY IN THE CGOA SHOULD NOT RESPOND TO THIS PRESENT NOTICE.
In addition to soliciting research proposals for field work the U.S. GLOBEC California Current System (CCS) program in the Northeast Pacific Ocean, this Notice is requesting proposals for modeling and retrospective analysis that augment or complement existing U.S. GLOBEC NEP efforts in these components. Modeling and retrospective proposals submitted in response to this Notice need not be CCS-specific, but those that are peripheral to the core activities in the CCS will have lower priority than those focusing on the CCS.
U.S. GLOBEC emphasizes studies on the biology/ecology of juvenile salmon, the euphausiids Euphausia pacifica and Thysanoessa spinifera, several large copepods, and forage fishes (salmon prey) in coastal regions of the North Pacific; and how these populations are controlled by climatically-variable physical forcing, especially at large-to meso-scales. Several other national and international programs will examine similar ecosystems and processes, and proposers should be aware of these ongoing and planned efforts.
The Pacific component of Canada GLOBEC is conducting similar ecosystem studies on La Perouse Bank off the western coast of Vancouver Island; the NOAA-sponsored Pacific Northwest Coastal Ecosystems Regional Study (PNCERS) program is carrying out studies on nearshore and estuarine processes related to the estuarine phase of salmon life-history in the U.S. Pacific Northwest (1998-2001); the California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations (CalCOFI) Program is in its fifth decade of study on fish and zooplankton populations off the coast of southern California. The North Pacific Marine Science Organization (PICES) Climate Change and Carrying Capacity (CCCC) Program emphasizes comparative studies of ecosystems along the continental margins of the north Pacific, examining all trophic levels, but with special emphasis on salmon. U.S. GLOBEC's studies in the Northeast Pacific region are an integral part of the pan-North Pacific CCCC effort.
In addition to these on-going studies, the Coastal Ocean Processes (COOP) program plans studies for 2000 and 2001 in a strongly, wind-driven region of the CCS, at a specific site still to be determined. These national and international investigations and others (such as the recently-begun, salmon- sampling program in the Columbia River plume and adjacent waters, funded by the Bonneville Power Authority [BPA]) complement the studies being done and the research planned by U.S. GLOBEC in the Northeast Pacific Ocean. They provide a unique opportunity for both regional and inter-regional comparisons and the evaluation of large-scale climatic influences (e.g., the El Nino - Southern Oscillation) on several pan-North Pacific species (e.g., salmon and Euphausia pacifica).
The U.S. GLOBEC Northeast Pacific Implementation Plan (U.S. GLOBEC Report No. 17) was developed following several community-wide meetings at which U.S. scientists from the oceanographic and fisheries communities identified key scientific issues and research prospectuses for the Northeast Pacific region. The overall objectives of the U.S. GLOBEC program are described in the U.S. GLOBEC Initial Science Plan (Report No. 1). Background information pertinent to the Northeast Pacific is found in U.S. GLOBEC Report Nos. 7, 11, 15 and 16. This GLOBEC report provides the most up-to-date guidance about the NEP program and supplements; and to a limited extent, supplants all earlier documents. Investigators who plan to submit proposals in response to this Announcement should refer primarily to this GLOBEC notice, and secondarily to the Northeast Pacific Implementation Plan (U.S. GLOBEC Report No. 17). Copies of these documents are available from the following address or homepage:
U.S. GLOBEC Coordinating Office
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
Chesapeake Biological Laboratory
P.O. BOX 38
Solomons, MD 20688
Phone: 410-326-7289; Fax: 410-326-7318
Email: fogarty@cbl.umces.edu
Internet: USGLOBEC
The recommendations contained in the U.S. GLOBEC Northeast Pacific Implementation Plan (U.S. GLOBEC Report No. 17) present the rationale for a coordinated study in the Northeast Pacific in two regions: the coastal Gulf of Alaska (CGOA) and the California Current System (CCS) ranging from Washington to Central California. Critical to that rationale is the observation that the salmon production domains in the CGOA and CCS covary, but are out of phase. Field programs will alternate between the CCS and CGOA in successive years.
U.S. GLOBEC proposes to investigate this coupling, and the biophysical mechanisms, through which zooplankton and salmon populations respond to physical forcing and biological interactions in the coastal regions of the two gyres. This will be accomplished through a combination of modeling, retrospective data analysis, long-term observations (LTOP), mesoscale surveys and focused field programs. This notice solicits proposals for all of these components of the NEP program with the exception of LTOP's, mesoscale surveys and process studies focused exclusively on CGOA. A future notice will request applications to support research on the CGOA activities outlined in previous paragraphs.
Proposals are currently requested to (a) execute CCS field programs, including LTOPs, mesoscale surveys and focused process studies, and (b) for retrospective data analysis and modeling in the NEP (both CCS and CGOA). Contingent on the availability of funds, mesoscale surveys and process studies will occur in the CCS in 2000 and in 2002.
Process studies in 2000 will focus on the effects of upwelling and cross-shelf exchange on the population dynamics of the target organisms north and south of Cape Blanco, OR. Where feasible (where timing and geography overlap), parts of the field program may be carried out in close coordination with nearshore interdisciplinary studies of the effects of wind-driven transport conducted by the NSF-funded Coastal Ocean Processes (COOP) program. slated to take place in 2000-2001.
Process-oriented studies in 2002 will focus on the effects of upwelling and three dimensional mesoscale circulation on the population dynamics of the target species north and south of Cape Blanco. Biotic processes and interactions, including factors affecting primary production and predation processes will be studied in both 2000 and 2002.
In the event that funding levels cannot support simultaneous studies north and south of Cape Blanco, it may be necessary to conduct studies north of the cape in 2000 and to the south in 2002. Proposals should consider contingency plans to accommodate such a change.
The Northeast Pacific CCS study is not restricted to the continental margin and shelf, but encompasses also the processes and phenomena of the larger oceanic boundary region that affect the CCS. U.S. GLOBEC began funding activities in the NEP in 1997. The initial phases of this inter-agency research program have supported integrated, multi-investigator, inter-disciplinary programs of modeling, retrospective analysis, and pilot-scale monitoring (henceforth referred to as the Long-Term Observation Program or LTOP). Proposers are advised to refer to the preliminary results from these programs (see http://www.usglobec.berkeley.edu/nep/index.html) prior to preparation of new proposals.
Ultimately, the U.S. GLOBEC effort in the Northeast Pacific has an overall goal of improving predictability and management of living marine resources of the region through improved understanding of ecosystem interactions and the coupling between the physical environment and the living resources.
Program Goals:
The over-reaching goals of the Northeast Pacific studies are:
(a) To determine how biological processes and characteristics of zooplanktonic populations are affected by mesoscale features and dynamics in the Northeast Pacific; and
(b) To quantify the biological and physical processes that determine growth and survival of juvenile salmon in the coastal zone.
Within the overall goals outlined above, the NE Pacific/CCS process-oriented field program has four general goals:
(l) To determine how changing climate, especially its impacts on local wind forcing and basin-scale currents, affect spatial and temporal variability in mesoscale circulation and vertical stratification.
(2) To quantify how physical features in the California Current System impact zooplankton biomass, production, distribution, and the retention and loss of zooplankton from coastal regions, with particular emphasis on the euphausiids Euphausia pacifica and Thysanoessa spinifera and calanoid copepods, and how these, in turn, influence the distributions of higher trophic levels.
(3) To quantify the impacts of (i) primary and secondary production, (ii) intensity and effectiveness of upwelling, (iii) cross-shelf transport associated with wind-driven upwelling, and (iv) variability in the timing of the spring transition, on controlling juvenile salmon growth and survival in the coastal zone of the CCS.
(4) To determine the extent to which high and variable predation mortality on juvenile coho and chinook salmon in the coastal region of the California Current is responsible for large interannual variation in adult salmon populations, and the factors responsible for the variable predation intensity.
Toward these ends, the Northeast Pacific field program has been structured to two years of intensive study (2000, 2002) in the California Current System. The geographic domain of the study extends from approximately Newport, OR to approximately Eureka, CA, and encompasses two different physically forced regimes as described in previous U.S. GLOBEC reports (Report Nos. 11, 17). Three-dimensional mesoscale surveys (via ship, drifter, mooring and satellite observations) and process studies will be conducted over a seventh-month period (ca. March - September) in each of the two intensive, process-study years. LTOP observations will continue during the "off" years 1999, 2001 and 2003. During field years, the LTOP program will include mesoscale surveys of physical conditions and biological distributions in spring and fall. The surveys will provide the short-term spatial context for the focused process studies, and will provide 3-dimensional data to supplement the predominantly 2-dimensional LTOP data.
U.S. GLOBEC process-oriented field research will focus on target species chosen to represent key elements of the marine ecosystem in the northern part of the CCS. These are the euphausiids Euphausia pacifica and Thysanoessa spinifera, calanoid copepods, and juvenile coho and chinook salmon. A broader suite of species may be the focus of modeling and retrospective studies as described in Table 4 of the Northeast Pacific Implementation Plan (U.S. GLOBEC Report No. 17, page 26).
The primary focus of process studies will be on (a) physical (e.g., stratification intensity; timing of the spring transition; intensity of upwelling) and biological (e.g., prey and predator abundance and distributions) factors influencing the population dynamics and vital rates of juvenile salmon and other target taxa (euphausiids, copepods) in the coastal region; (b) retention and loss of populations of target species, as impacted by mesoscale circulation and cross-shelf transport into the coastal jet off Oregon/No. Calif. (loss) or maintenance in the coastal upwelling zone (retention); and (c) a comparison of these processes (a,b) north and south of Cape Blanco, Oregon. Specific information about the NE Pacific Study, including descriptions and points of contact of presently funded GLOBEC NEP projects, can be obtained from the following address or homepage:
U.S. GLOBEC Northeast Pacific Coordinating Office
COAS
Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR 97331-5503
phone: 541-737-4500
Email: hbatchelder@coas.oregonstate.edu
Internet:NEP GLOBEC
Structure of the CCS Research Program:
The NE Pacific Study will comprise five major components:(a)long-term observation programs (LTOP), (b) mesoscale surveys, (c) process-oriented field studies, (d) modeling investigations, and (e)retrospective/comparative analysis. The large range of spatial and temporal scales of important forcing processes and responses in the NEP requires a nested sampling approach (and some associated tradeoffs), which is reflected in the descriptions of the LTOP, mesoscale surveys, and process-studies below.
Long-Term Observation Programs (LTOP):
Long-Term Observation Programs have already been established by U.S. GLOBEC at two NEP sites: one along the Gulf of Alaska (GAK) transect extending offshore from Seward, AK, and the second encompassing several offshore extending transects off Newport and Coos Bay, OR. In both regions, the programs are sampling ocean physics, nutrients, and biology at approximately bimonthly intervals (both projects are described on the NEP web site). GLOBEC is an ecosystem program, that focuses on zooplankton and juvenile salmon in the NEP, but we encourage sampling of phytoplankton and nutrients as well. The LTOPs provide the fundamental seasonal description of the physical, chemical and biological environment that is required to complement the mesoscale surveys and process studies. Moreover, U.S. GLOBEC LTOPs, in conjunction with observations at other sites by other programs (Canada GLOBEC, CalCOFI, Ocean Carrying Capacity) will document the low-frequency, large amplitude signals (e.g., regime shifts, El Niños) that occur at the largest spatial scales in the Pacific. LTOPs are primarily 2-dimensional (2-D) cross-shelf descriptions, which may miss important spatial features and processes of the marine ecosystem.
Mesoscale surveys (described below) conducted twice (spring and fall) during process-study years will provide the spatially-resolved 3-dimensional data required to evaluate how well local LTOP data generalize to a broader region. Data from the mesoscale surveys will be used to bridge the gap between the low spatial (2-D), but annual and long-term coverage of the LTOPs, and the intensive, but spatially-limited process-studies. LTOP projects may make use of multi-disciplinary moorings, long-term drifter deployments, and analysis of satellite data, in additional to seasonal ship observations. There is a continuing need for long-term mooring- and drifter-based observations and interpretation of regional satellite data, which provide the broadest temporal (moorings, drifters) and spatial (satellites) resolution and coverage.
This notice solicits proposals to conduct core LTOP observations in regions both north and south of Cape Blanco. Projects proposing to conduct LTOP observations north of Cape Blanco should consider existing LTOP programs in place. There is presently no LTOP program for the region between Cape Blanco and Eureka, CA. We seek proposals to undertake core LTOP studies at two or more transects between Cape Blanco and Eureka, CA. Present and prospective U.S. GLOBEC LTOP programs should consider (a) how they meet future U.S. GLOBEC needs, particularly for process studies, and (b) how they mesh into the larger framework of a coastwide network of programs undertaking repeated observations of ocean physics and biology at all trophic levels. Moreover, potential LTOP projects should contact the principals of existing LTOP projects to ensure that methodologies are comparable (see the NEP web site) among all of the LTOP sites.
Three-Dimensional Mesoscale Surveys:
Ship surveys are needed to determine the distribution and abundance of the target species in relation to their physical environment during the period of euphausiid recruitment and juvenile salmon entry into the ocean (March to September). This period encompasses the spring-transition in the CCS, the initiation of upwelling and its ramifications for production, as well as the period of ocean entry by juvenile salmon and their first summer of growth.
Spatially, the ship-based mesoscale sampling should encompass both the nearshore upwelling region and the coastal jet that ultimately carries a large portion of the flow of the California Current. High priority will be given to proposals that would survey a region extending from approximately Newport, OR to Eureka, CA, i.e., about 500 km along shore, and extending from nearshore to 100 km (perhaps more south of Cape Blanco, where the jet meanders further from shore). The fundamental importance of the mesoscale studies is to provide the basis for comparisons of population processes and their coupling to the physical structure and variability of the environment, and to examine these processes in the two regimes separated by Cape Blanco, OR. The mesoscale studies will provide a regional context for the in situ, process studies (described below) and provide further data to evaluate the environment for juvenile salmon. Mesoscale studies will complement and be complemented by LTOP characterizations and descriptions of the physical and biological conditions of the nearshore and offshore ocean environment. Surveys will provide data required to evaluate coupled circulation-ecosystem models being developed for the NEP study sites, and for assimilation of data into these models. Presently, the Oregon LTOP effort samples Coos Bay and Newport lines 5X/year. It is anticipated that the mesoscale surveys will be conducted at a given site only in years of process-studies and that only two mesoscale surveys per year focused on critical periods in the life history of the target species (spring and fall) will be done. Mesoscale surveys in spring and fall will augment, and must coordinate with spring and fall LTOP observations.
Sampling of juvenile salmon (trawling) in the region extending from Newport, OR to Eureka, CA is a critical addition to the CCS component of the NEP program since salmon are a target species of the program. Salmon sampling in this region will complement existing efforts to describe salmon abundance, distribution, and condition in the vicinity of the Columbia River plume (by BPA), in British Columbia (Canadian GLOBEC) and by NMFS programs further south (Gulf of Farallones) and north (SE Alaska, Auke Bay, and off Prince William Sound).
Proposals are solicited that will provide spatial descriptions of juvenile coho and chinook salmon, and their forage prey in this region at the time of ocean entry (approx. Apr-May) and at the end of the first summer in the ocean (approx. September). These collections would also be useful for examining (a) trophic relationships in the nearshore ecosystem, and (b) genetic structure/stock identity of the salmonids. Highest priority will be given to salmon sampling in the field during process-study years, but contingent on the availability of funding and perceived program needs, salmon sampling in "off" years might be supported as well. Investigators proposing to sample juvenile salmon in Oregon and Northern California should coordinate sampling plans/gear with both the CGOA salmon sampling effort and other juvenile salmon trawling efforts on the west coast (e.g., NMFS research).
Process Studies:
Earlier U.S. GLOBEC reports (U.S. GLOBEC Reports Nos. 7, 11) provide the rationale for conducting ecosystem studies in coastal regions both north and south of Cape Blanco--primarily because of regional differences in seasonality and intensity of the physical forcing. For example, mesoscale activity is much more pronounced south of Cape Blanco than further north. Mesoscale features are important to biological processes in many regions (e.g., Arabian Sea from recent JGOFS results), and are likely to be very important in the CCS. Detailed investigations of mechanisms linking biological response to physical forcing at the meso- and other scales will be accomplished in process-study cruises. Specifically, the physical and biological processes that control the population dynamics of the target species will be examined in process studies. The northern CCS region has as its main features, a nearshore zone of moderate coastal upwelling which is strongest in spring and summer, and offshore, a relatively narrow jet that, south of Cape Blanco, represents a substantial proportion of the southward transport of the California Current. Biological populations entrained in this highly advective jet, with surface velocities exceeding 40 cm/sec, are transported rapidly southward. As wind-driven upwelling intensifies early in the year, the upwelling region expands and the jet tends to move further offshore. The three-dimensional, time-dependent circulation is understood conceptually but not in detail. The exchange of physical and biological properties across the frontal zones associated with both the nearshore upwelling and offshore jet regions can influence the supply of nutrients for primary production, the retention (loss) of the target species and their prey in (from) the coastal zone, and interactions between the target species, their prey, and their predators.
Cross-frontal exchange is influenced by physical processes which determine the location, deformation, and movement of the front including tides, winds, seasonal heating/cooling, and offshore forcing, and by biological characteristics and behavior which may enhance or minimize exchange. Fronts often are regions of aggregation for marine plankton, both because of physical processes such as divergence or convergence and biological responses such as enhanced production or behavior (i.e., depth-keeping swimming). Such aggregations of plankton may provide an enhanced food source for predators including juvenile salmon. Fine-scale description of the physical and biological fields comprising fronts may reveal aggregations of phytoplankton and zooplankton associated with specific physical (e.g., density, temperature) structures. Determination of the population structure of target organisms within the study area is further identified as an area of critical research.
It is recognized that because of the movement and migratory patterns of juvenile salmon, and consideration of their current low abundance, process studies of chinook and coho salmon may require work outside of the region from Newport, OR to Eureka, CA to ensure success. Proposals that focus in geographical locations outside the principal study area should closely consider the availability of complementary sampling programs (e.g. BPA funded monitoring in the Columbia River plume) to provide a broader geographical context for their studies. Proposers seeking additional contact information concerning related NEP programs should contact the U.S. GLOBEC Northeast Pacific Coordinating Office at the address given above.
Questions to be addressed by process studies in the CCS include:
(a) What is the time-dependent three-dimensional circulation associated with the nearshore upwelling zone, the offshore jet, and the fronts associated with these features in the CCS?
(b) How do mesoscale transport processes affect the recruitment, vital rates, and other measures of population dynamics of the target species?
(c) What are the exchange rates, due to frontal processes, of water properties and the target species between the upwelling zone and the offshore jet? What are the consequences for individual and population growth rates of these exchanges?
(d) How do biological and physical processes interact to control cross-shelf exchange of target organisms?
(e) Does frontal movement (e.g., seasonal expansion of the nearshore upwelling region) influence the exchange of water and organisms across fronts?
(f) How does distribution, growth and survival of juvenile coho and chinook salmon depend on the timing and intensity of coastal upwelling, availability and distribution of their prey, and alternative prey for juvenile salmon predators?
(g) How are salmon distributed in relation to mesoscale physical features, and what are the mechanisms responsible for the observed patterns?
(h) What are the dominant predators, and what are their feeding rates and impacts on juvenile salmon during the period they transit the coastal zone of the CCS?
Modeling:
The research conducted during the CCS study will result in a significant archive of data concerning abundance and distribution of the target species, source regions, vital rates, and trophic interrelationships. Also expected are specific estimates of population dynamics parameters arrived at by inverse modeling. These archives and tools will provide significant opportunities for hypothesis testing concerning biophysical processes. The program is expected to progress toward a data-assimilative capability, wherein LTOP and mesoscale survey data are incorporated into coupled biophysical models. In addition, process-oriented model studies are encouraged.
Finally, the forthcoming U.S. GLOBEC studies of euphausiids, copepods, and salmon in the Gulf of Alaska (CGOA), provide an opportunity for larger (basin) scale modeling of coupled biological/physical dynamics. Studies of Calanus across the North Atlantic, and of Euphausia superba in the Southern Ocean, provide opportunities for broader, global-scale comparisons of biophysical/population dynamics among congeners.
We solicit additional modeling proposals that complement existing projects (described on the GLOBEC NEP web site), that provide additional breadth to the program by examining responses at additional trophic levels, and that explore processes in other targeted regions of the northeast Pacific. Proposals responding to this request for additional modeling activities in the NEP may deal with either the CGOA, the CCS, or both. Priority will be given to projects that complement or significantly augment ongoing modeling efforts--for example, evaluating the impact of other prey (e.g., forage fish) on salmon survival and distribution.
Retrospective/Comparative Analysis:
The first Notice for NEP studies in the U.S. GLOBEC program resulted in the funding of 8 retrospective projects. Abstract summaries of these projects are available in U.S. GLOBEC News No. 12 and on the NEP web site. Projects proposing retrospective analysis should document or address population variability of key species (see U.S. GLOBEC Report No. 17) in NEP ecosystems on several different time and space scales. These studies should also examine linkages between physical and biological processes on these different scales. Previous U.S. GLOBEC reports (see esp. U.S. GLOBEC Report Nos. 11 and 15) review some of the kinds of data sets and research approaches suitable for examining links between climate variability, ocean physics and marine animal populations in the NEP.
Retrospective analysis may include (a) examination of historical records (e.g., fish scales or other hard parts in marine sediments) of population abundances of fishes and other species to document effects of oceanic variability on population abundance, (b) documentation of decadal, interannual and perhaps geographical variability in individual growth of juvenile salmon and prey species as recorded in fish scale circuli and otoliths, and (c) molecular analysis of archival collections of key species to estimate historical patterns of spatial and temporal genetic variability.
NEP retrospective analysis should attempt to test the core GLOBEC NEP hypotheses relating to the linkage between climate and ocean variability and population variability. Other research approaches and examinations of other existing data sets may be appropriate for retrospective examination provided that they address the critical NEP GLOBEC mandates highlighted in bold above.
U.S. GLOBEC's Phase III research in the Northwest Atlantic (1999 process studies) also focuses on cross-frontal exchange, and provides opportunities for comparative investigations of cross-frontal exchange between the two systems (CCS and Georges Bank). Moreover, the CCS ecosystem is one of many eastern boundary current ecosystems (Benguela, North Africa, Humboldt) with which comparisons could be made. Similarly, the predominantly downwelling, buoyancy-driven coastal ecosystem of the CGOA could be compared with similar ecosystems across the globe.
Schedule and Proposal Submission:
The guidelines for proposal preparation provided below are mandatory. Proposals received after the published deadline, or proposals that deviate from the prescribed format, will be returned to the sender without further consideration. This announcement, and additional background information, will be made available on the COP home page on the World Wide Web at: COP home page
This opportunity is open to all interested, qualified, non-federal, and federal researchers. Foreign researchers must subcontract with U.S. proposers. Non-federal researchers should comply with their institutional requirements for proposal submission. Non-federal researchers affiliated with NOAA-university Joint Institutes should comply with joint institutional requirements. Proposals deemed acceptable from federal researchers will be funded through NOAA; non-federal awardees will be funded through their joint institutes, as appropriate, or through a grant from NOAA or NSF. Proposals selected for NSF funding will be required to submit additional forms and paperwork for grants processing.
Full Proposals:
Proposals submitted to this announcement must include the original and two unbound copies of the proposal. Investigators are not required to submit more than three copies of the proposal; however, the normal review process requires twenty copies. Investigators are encouraged to submit sufficient proposal copies for the full review process if they wish all reviewers to receive color or high-resolution graphics, unusual sized materials (not 8.5" x 11"), or otherwise unusual materials submitted as part of the proposal. Facsimile transmissions and electronic mail submission of full proposals will not be accepted.
Required Elements:
All recipients are to closely follow the instructions and guidelines in the preparation of the standard NOAA Application Forms and Kit requirements listed in Section (n) under Supplementary Information. Each proposal must also include the following eight elements:
(a) Signed Summary title page--The title page should be signed by the Principal Investigator (PI) and the institutional representative. The Summary Title page identifies the project's title starting with the acronym GLOBEC, a short title (<50 characters), and the lead principal investigator's name and affiliation, complete address, phone, FAX, and E-mail information.
(b) One-page abstract/project summary--An abstract must be included and should contain an introduction of the problem, rationale, scientific objectives and/or hypotheses to be tested, and a brief summary of work to be completed. The abstract should appear on a separate page, headed with the proposal title, institution(s), investigator(s), total proposed cost, and budget period.
(c) Statement of work/project description--The first section of the Project Description must be a Statement of Work for Year one, followed by a section of Relevant Results from Prior Support (not to exceed five (5) pages). The remainder of the Project Description is as follows: The proposed project must be completely described, including identification of the problem, scientific objectives, proposed methodology, relevance to the goals of the GLOBEC Program, and its scientific priorities.
Project management should be clearly identified with a description of the functions of each principal investigator within a team. It is important to provide a full scientific justification for the research; do not simply reiterate justifications presented in this notice. The project description section (including Relevant Results from Prior Support,) should not exceed fifteen (15) pages.
Both page limits are inclusive of figures and other visual materials, but exclusive of references and milestone chart. This section should also include:
(1) the objective for the period of proposed work and its
expected significance.
(2) the relation to the present state of knowledge
in the field and relation to previous work and work in progress by the
proposing principal investigator(s).
(3) a discussion of how the proposed projectlends value to the program
goals
(4) potential coordination with other investigators.
(d) References Cited--Reference information is required. Each reference must include the name(s) of all authors in the same sequence in which they appear in the publications, the article title, volume number, page numbers, and year of publications. While there is no established page limitation, this section should include bibliographic citations only and should not be used to provide parenthetical information outside of the fifteen-page project description.
(e) Milestone chart--Time lines of major tasks covering the duration of the proposed project up to sixty (60) months.
(f) Budget--Applicants must submit a Standard Form 424 (Rev 7-97), "Application for Federal Assistance", including a detailed budget using the Standard Form 424A (Rev 7-97), "Budget Information - Non-Construction Programs". These forms are included on the COP website listed under section (n) Application Forms and Kit. Present the budget in fiscal year increments (1999, 2000, ... 2003) as Proposals must include total and annual budgets corresponding with the descriptions provided in the statement of work. Include a budget narrative/justification to support all proposed categories. NSF requires information on ship requirements in order to schedule time on UNOLS (University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System) vessels. Ship requirements and costs do not need to be included on the budget forms SF424 or SF424A, but must be separately identified to NSF by submitting a NSF-UNOLS Ship Time Request Form (available from UNOLS Office, University of Rhode Island, P.O. Box 392, Saunderstown, RI 02874, (401) 874-6825; Fax: (401) 874-6486; email: unols@gsosun1.gso.uri.edu. An electronic version of the UNOLS request form is available at UNOLS request form. If no ship time is required, submit the UNOLS form and indicate that no shiptime is required.
Note that for multi-year project periods, the out-year budget estimates are to be included in Section E, page 2, on the SF424A. The program office shall review the proposed budgets to determine the necessity and adequacy of proposed costs for accomplishing the objectives of the proposed grant.
(g) Biographical sketch--Abbreviated curriculum vitae, two pages per investigator, are sought with each proposal. Include a list of up to five (5) publications most closely related to the proposed project and up to five (5) other significant publications. A list of ALL persons (including their organizational affiliation), in alphabetical order, who have collaborated on a project, book, article, or paper within the last 48 months should be included. If there are no collaborators, this should be so indicated. Students, post-doctoral associates, and graduate and postgraduate advisors of the PI should also be disclosed. This information is used to help identify potential conflicts of interest or bias in the selection of reviewers.
(h) Current and Pending Support--NSF requires information on current and pending support of all proposers. Describe all current and pending support for all principal investigators (PIs), including subsequent funding in the case of continuing grants. A model format is available on NSF form 1239, available at NSF FORM Use of this form is optional, however, the categories of information included on the NSF Form 1239 must be provided. All current support from whatever source (e.g., Federal, State or local government agencies, private foundations, industrial or other commercial organizations) must be listed. The proposed project and all other projects or activities requiring a portion of time of the PI and other senior personnel should be included, even if they receive no salary support from the project(s). The total award amount for the entire award period covered (including indirect costs) should be shown as well as the number of person-months per year to be devoted to the project, regardless of source of support.
Proposal Format and Assembly:
Clamp the proposal in the upper left-hand corner, but otherwise leave it unbound. Use one (1) inch (2.5 cm) margins at the top, bottom, left and right of each page. Use a clear and easily legible type face in standard size of twelve (12) points. Print on one side of the page only.
Further Supplementary Information
(a) Program Authority (s): 33 U.S.C. 1121; 33 U.S.C. 883a et seq. 33 U.S.C. 1442; l6 U.S.C. 1456c.
(b) Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA): 11. 478 Coastal Ocean Program.
(c) Program Description: See initial COP General Notice--63 FR44237, dated August 18, 1998.
(d) Funding Availability: Funding is contingent upon receipt of fiscal years 1999 - 2003 federal appropriations. The anticipated maximum annual funding for NEP GLOBEC activities is ca. $6-8M, which may not occur until 2001; until then the program expects increments from its current level of ca. $2.5M/yr. Of the annual total, approximately half will be devoted to CCS activities, and half to CGOA research.
If an application is selected for funding, NSF and NOAA have no obligation to provide any additional prospective funding in connection with that award in subsequent years. Renewal of an award to increase funding or extend the period of performance is at the total discretion of the funding agencies. Not all proposals selected will receive funding for the entire duration of the CCS program. Moreover, start dates for some proposals may be delayed, or proposals may be funded for the second of the two field years only. Proposals selected for funding by NSF will need to submit additional forms required by that agency. Publication of this notice does not obligate any agency to any specific award or to obligate any part of the entire amount of funds available.
(e) Matching Requirements: None.
(f) Type of Funding Instrument: Project Grants
(g) Eligibility Criteria: Opportunity is extended to universities, colleges, junior colleges, technical schools, institutions, laboratories, and non-profit organizations. Non-federal researchers should comply with their institutional requirements for proposal submission. Federal researchers in successful multi-investigator proposals will be funded through NOAA.
(h) Award Period: Full Proposals can cover a project period from one to five years, i.e. from date of award for up to sixty (60) consecutive months. Multi-year project period funding may be funded incrementally on an annual basis. For NOAA awards, each annual award shall require a Statement of Work that can be easily separated into annual increments of meaningful work which represent solid accomplishments if prospective funding is not made available, or is discontinued.
(i) Indirect Costs: If Indirect costs are proposed, the following statement applies: The total dollar amount of the indirect costs proposed in an application must not exceed the indirect cost rate negotiated and approved by a cognizant Federal agency prior to the proposed effective date of the award or 100 percent of the total proposed direct costs dollar amount in the application, whichever is less.
(j) Application Forms and Kit: When applying for financial assistance under this announcement, applicants will be able to obtain a copy of the Federal Register Notice and a standard NOAA Application Kit from the COP home page on the following World Wide Web address: NOAA Application Kit If you are unable to access this information, you may also call the Coastal Ocean Program (extension 116) at the address listed above to leave a mail request. The Standard Forms 424 (Rev 7-97) Application for Federal Assistance; 424A (Rev 7-97); Budget Information - Non-Construction Programs; and 424B (Rev 7-97) Assurances - Non Construction Programs, shall be used in applying for financial assistance. In addition, Forms CD-511, Certifications Regarding Debarment, Suspension and Other Responsibility Matters; Drug-Free Workplace Requirements and Lobbying; CD-512, Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and Voluntary Exclusion-Lower Tier Covered Transactions and Lobbying; and SF-LLL, Disclosure of Lobbying Activities, will be used as appropriate.
(k) Project Funding Priorities: Priority consideration will be given to a set of proposals that provide balanced coverage of the overall GLOBEC science goals, and avoid duplication of completed or ongoing work.
(l) Evaluation Criteria: Consideration for financial assistance will be given to those proposals which address one or more of the program goals listed above and meet the following evaluation criteria:
(i) Scientific Merit (20%): Intrinsic scientific value of the subject and the study proposed.
(ii) Relevance (20%): Importance and relevance to the goals of NEP GLOBEC and to the research goals listed above.
(iii) Methodology (20%): Focused scientific objective and strategy, including measurement strategies and data management considerations; project milestones; and final products.
(iv) Readiness (20%): Nature of the problem; relevant history and status of existing work; level of planning, including existence of supporting documents; strength of proposed scientific and management team; past performance record of proposers.
(v) Linkages (10%): Connections to existing or planned national and international programs; partnerships with other GLOBEC participants, where appropriate.
(vi) Costs (10%): Adequacy of proposed resources; appropriate share of total available resources; prospects for joint funding; identification of long-term commitments. (Matching funding is encouraged, but is not required)
(m) Selection Procedures: All proposals will be evaluated and ranked individually in accordance with the assigned weights of the above evaluation criteria by (1) independent peer mail review, and (2) independent peer panel review. Both NOAA and non-NOAA experts in the field may be used in this process. The program officer(s) will not vote as part of the independent peer panel. The panel recommendations and evaluations will be considered by the Program Manager / Officer(s) in final selections. A scale of one to five will be used where scores represent, respectively, excellent, very good, good, fair, poor. Those ranked by the panel and program as not recommended for funding will not be given further consideration and will be notified of non-selection. For the proposals rated either Excellent, Very Good or Good, the NOAA GLOBEC Program Manager and the NSF Biological Oceanography Program Director will: (i) ascertain which proposals meet GLOBEC objectives, fit the criteria posted, and do not substantially duplicate other projects that are currently funded by NOAA or are approved for funding by other federal agencies (b) select the proposals to be recommended for funding (c) determine the total duration of funding for each proposal, and (d) determine the amount of funds available for each proposal. Awards may not necessarily be made to the proposals scored highest by the panel and/or mail reviews.
The NOAA GLOBEC Program Manager or the NSF Biological Oceanography Program Director or staff will notify lead proposers for those projects recommended for support, and negotiate revisions in the proposed work and budget. Final awards will be issued by the agency responsible for a specific project after receipt and processing of any specific materials required by the agency.
When a decision has been made (whether an award or declination), verbatim copies of reviews, excluding the names of the reviewers, and summaries of review panel deliberations, if any, are available to the proposer. No information directly identifying reviewers or other pending or declined proposals will be released.
(r) Other Requirements: See initial COP Notice--63 FR44237, dated August 18, 1998 at the COP Internet Site: COP Internet Site
(s) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty for failure to comply with a collection of information subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act, unless that collection displays a current valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number. This notice involves collections of information subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act. The requirements have been approved by OMB under control numbers 0348-0043, 0348-0044, 0348-0040 and 0348-0046.
Leslie McDonald
COP Grants Office
Room 9729 / SSMC3