00:22:16 Paul McCollum: Paul McCollum, Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe 00:22:46 Nathalie Hamel: Nathalie Hamel, sher/her, Vital Signs reporting lead at Puget Sound Partnership 00:23:01 Tarang Khangaonkar: Tarang Khangaonkar, PNNL and Salish Sea Modeling Center (SSMC) 00:23:07 Rachael Mueller: Good morning! I’m Rachael Mueller with the Puget Sound Institute. Nice to see you all here. 00:23:19 Parker MacCready: Parker Maccready, UW Oceanography, LiveOcean model developer. 00:23:25 Hem Nalini Morzaria-Luna - LLTK (She/Her): Hem Nalini Morzaria-Luna. She/Her. Long Live the Kings. I lead the Atlantis ecosystem model for Puget Sound. 00:23:29 Teri King: Good morning, Teri King, Washington Sea Grant and SoundToxins. 00:23:46 Tracie Barry (WDOH, she/her): Tracie Barry, WDOH Biotoxin Program 00:23:46 Jake Dingwall (Pacific Salmon Foundation): Morning everyone, Jake Dingwall, Pacific Salmon Foundation Marine Science Program, Victoria 00:23:47 Jonathan Halama: Hello. Jonathan Halama. US EPA 00:23:49 Susan Allen: Susan Allen, U. British Columbia, SalishSeaCast model developer. 00:23:52 Brandon Sackmann: Good morning! Brandon Sackmann, GSI Environmental Inc. 00:23:53 Aimee Kinney: Aimee Kinney, Puget Sound Institute 00:23:53 Mr. Seth Book, Skokomish Tribe: Seth Book, he/him, Skokomish Tribe Natural Resources 00:23:59 Jacque Klug: Jacque Klug, King County Wastewater Treatment Division 00:24:00 Joel Baker: Joel Baker, UW Puget Sound Institute 00:24:05 Justin Del Bel Belluz: Good morning, Justin Del Bel Belluz, Hakai Institute. 00:24:07 Neil Harrington: Good Morning! This is Neil Harrington,(he/him) Environmental Biologist for the Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe 00:24:23 Sophia Johannessen (she/elle) Fisheries and Oceans Canada: Good morning! Sophie Johannessen (she/elle) Fisheries and Oceans Canada 00:24:38 Colleen Kellogg: Good morning! Colleen Kellogg, Hakai Institute in British Columbia 00:24:50 Jude Apple: Jude Apple (he/him), Director at Padilla Bay NERR WA 00:25:02 Ben Roberts: Ben Roberts, University of Washington PhD student 00:25:02 Maycira Costa: HI, Maycira from UVic, BC Canada 00:25:11 Dakota Mascarenas: Dakota Mascarenas (she/her), UW-CEE PhD Student 00:25:22 Svetlana Esenkulova - Pacific Salmon Foundation, Canada: Good morning. Svetlana Esenkulova, biologist, Pacific Salmon Foundation, Canada 00:25:34 Kelly Young: Good morning! Kelly Young, (she/elle)Zooplankton biologist, IOS - Fisheries and Oceans Canada, BC 00:26:14 Stefano Mazzilli: Good morning, Stefano Mazzilli from Puget Sound Institute, UW 00:26:25 Gabriela Hannach: Hello. Gabriela Hannach, King County Environmental Lab 00:26:40 Curtis DeGasperi (he/him) King Co. WLRD: Good Morning! Curtis DeGasperi, King County Water and Land Resources Division 00:27:55 Jan Newton: Jan Newton, University of Washington, biological oceanographer, NANOOS Director 00:44:48 Michael Connor: Not clear that the Frasier river end member consisstent with a south Puget Sound end member 00:51:18 Rachael Mueller (she/her): Great quote 00:55:02 Parker MacCready: Can these numbers be compared to the 280 g C m-2 yr-2 you mentioned at the start of the talk? 00:58:45 Michael Connor: Did you look at N15 in ammonia. Might see a stronger signal for anthropogenic. dugdale positing it would make a big difference on diatom/dino mix 00:58:51 Rachael Mueller (she/her): What does is mean if both bloom and non-bloom is increasing (prior to 100 years)? Could one interpretation be that productivity was increasing overall, before 100 years, and then flattened because one type lowered while the other increased? (Recognizing this is just in one place) 00:59:14 Jan Newton: Perplexed by the Si:NO3 ratio decrease in PS yet increase in SoG… I'm here with my FHL class with 19 y data record in San Juan Archipelago and we see a negative slope here. 00:59:31 Cheryl Greengrove: great talk! 00:59:31 Joel Baker: Thanks Sophie! If you had the opportunity to collect and analyze 10 long cores in the Salish Sea to follow up on this work, where would you poke the holes to give the most information? 01:00:12 Jan Newton: Great talk, Sophie, lets follow up and with CK too! :) 01:11:04 Sophie Johannessen (she/elle) Fisheries and Oceans Canada: Amazing agreement between satellite and taxonomy for diatoms! 01:11:43 Julia Bos: And Total Chla looked really well-represented also. exciting! 01:20:52 Michael Connor: How crucial is your ferry correction of the data? There are several more ferries. How expensive to line up 01:21:53 Hem Nalini Morzaria-Luna (She/her) LLTK: Can you post the citation for your Suchy Costa 2022 paper that looked at salmon dynamics? 01:22:05 Rachael Mueller (she/her): https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Christian-Marchese/publication/363883250_Bioregionalization_of_the_coastal_and_open_oceans_of_British_Columbia_and_Southeast_Alaska_based_on_Sentinel-3A_satellite-derived_phytoplankton_seasonality/links/6333232023ead926115ce450/Bioregionalization-of-the-coastal-and-open-oceans-of-British-Columbia-and-Southeast-Alaska-based-on-Sentinel-3A-satellite-derived-phytoplankton-seasonality.pdf 01:22:34 Rachael Mueller (she/her): My bad. That isn’t the right publication. 01:24:11 Kelly Young: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.832684/full 01:25:55 Maycira Costa: ferry sensors: quite expensive, needs a lot of attention. This kind of data will be very important for the PACE mission. unfortunately, the BC Ferries stopped supporting this program since mid-2020 due to covid restrictions. 01:27:37 Brian Hunt: I cannot unmute 01:28:33 Ben Roberts: no sympathy :) 01:42:10 Sophie Johannessen (she/elle) Fisheries and Oceans Canada: Brian - the nutritional value of picoplankton and the contribution of terrigenous material are both fascinating. I'd like to talk more with you about that and what we could trace in the sediment... 01:42:40 Brian Hunt: @Sophie - very happy to do that 01:44:35 Michael Connor: Be nice to see a Si budget 01:45:57 Michael Connor: Do you do C14 in cqres. how are you dating them? 01:46:48 Bart Christiaen: Is there an understanding of the contribution of macrophytes in nearshore environments to total the biomass of primary producers / total primary production in Puget Sound? 01:48:14 LINCOLN LOEHR: Wondering if in the sediment core data one can pick up a signal of changes associated with reductions in particulate organic matter discharged from pulp and paper mills and municipalities since 1972. 01:50:25 Sophie Johannessen (she/elle) Fisheries and Oceans Canada: Maycira- does the satellite-derived DOC represent CDOM or all DOM? 01:51:06 Maycira Costa: Sophie: the satellite-derived is CDOM 01:51:18 Bart Christiaen: yes, I am from DNR 01:51:24 Bart Christiaen: Cannot unmute though 01:53:51 Michael Connor: Hipsographic chart would give you a quick first oreder extimate 01:56:19 Sophie Johannessen (she/elle) Fisheries and Oceans Canada: Lincoln - yes, the sediment cores recorded a pulp mill signal in contaminants - mainly dioxins and furans. C/N ratios and the terrigenous flux (from stable isotopes) also reflect changes in pulp mills as well as land-clearing in general. 02:04:01 Michael Connor: what's striking about model data comparison is model misses daily maxes. It could be that these daily maxes and mins ar more importatnt markers to the health of the system and should be captured in the sensitivity analyses 02:15:48 Mr. Seth Book, Skokomish Tribe: Hood Canal specific question/thought/requests. I will contact specific speakers for more info. Can we get spectral "ferry sensors" on southern Salish Sea vessels? UW research vessel? Would be interested in continuous reflectance data from Hood Canal during Coccolithophore blooms coupled with primary productivity results. Also, if more sediment cores collected, suggest same Hood Canal sites (HC-3, HC-5) as well as Dabob and HC southeast arm. very interesting work. Thank you. 02:16:22 Tech Support: For anyone who works on watershed modeling we hope you can join: 1. Nutrient Forum for December 7, from 1:00pm - 3:30pm. The Forum will include speakers from USGS and Ecology's Environmental Assessment Program https://waecy-wa-gov.zoom.us/w/85125152062?tk=PH5fqc4NHADTdfWSz_CM0SlfgU1ySF8wFuePofefIl8.DQMAAAAT0dq9PhY1cWV1UVdNMVFIRzJoZ0laZTQ1NEJBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA&uuid=WN_BFNBWeD-RkuWFhUdJNBmvA 2. PSEMP & PSI Watershed Modeling workshop on December 12 from 9 – 11 AM PT https://washington.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJYrdOGprTkiHNYz_jtmbQLduyqRIKK59tzq 02:19:20 Mr. Seth Book, Skokomish Tribe: please unmet 02:21:23 Michael Connor: Dr. Costa 02:22:43 Michael Connor: Dr Costa- how far down the coast do you analyze. We had a bad Heterosigma bloom down in SF Bay that there's a big debate on initiation. I've asked Dave Senn at SFEI to contact you 02:23:34 Maycira Costa: Michael: please contact me at maycira@uvic.ca 02:25:01 Curtis DeGasperi (he/him) King Co. WLRD: Thanks!