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Northeast U.S. Shelf LTER

Home » Sites » Northeast U.S. Shelf LTER

Site Contacts

Lead Principal Investigator: Heidi Sosik
Research/Site Coordinator: Connor Ahearn
Administrative Contact: Connor Ahearn
Information Manager: Kate Morkeski
Education Contact: Annette Brickley
Broadening Participation Contact: Rachel Stanley
Site Grad Rep A: Alexandra Cabanelas Bermudez
Site Grad Rep B: Erica Ewton
View all people at this site

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Site Details

Research Topics:
To understand and predict how planktonic food webs are changing on the Northeast U.S. Shelf, and to address the five core research themes of the LTER Network, the NES-LTER strategy includes integration and synthesis of multi-disciplinary observations, experiments, and models. Research topics span biological, chemical, and physical oceanography. Read More
To understand and predict how planktonic food webs are changing on the Northeast U.S. Shelf, and to address the five core research themes of the LTER Network, the NES-LTER strategy includes integration and synthesis of multi-disciplinary observations, experiments, and models. Research topics span biological, chemical, and physical oceanography. Research Topics as listed in the international registry of LTER sites include: biology, ecology, aquatic ecology, marine ecology, biodiversity, genetic diversity, marine biodiversity, species diversity, community ecology, community dynamics, successional dynamics, trophic dynamics, trophic interaction, microbial ecology, population ecology, population dynamics, phenology, taxonomy, chemistry, water chemistry, oceanography.Read Less
Description:
The research plan for the Northeast U.S. Shelf LTER is guided by an overarching science question: How is long-term environmental change impacting the pelagic NES ecosystem and, in particular, affecting the relationship between compositional (e.g., species diversity and size structure) and aggregate (e.g., rates of primary production, and transfer of energy to important forage fish species) variability? Read More

The northwest Atlantic is renowned for productive fisheries that depend upon a complex food web of planktonic organisms that provide them energy. In these waters -- as in coastal waters around the globe -- human activities, environmental variability, and decadal-scale change intersect to have diverse effects on the planktonic food web. It is crucial to understand the structure of this web, how it functions, and how it responds to seasonal environmental change, in order to respond appropriately to long-term trends that are accelerating in this region. Our understanding, however, has been limited by a lack of systematic and detailed measurements over a sufficient length of time so that we can observe the responses of these webs to environmental perturbations and uncover the underlying causes and implications.

The Northeast US Shelf (NES) Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) project will provide such observations, analyze them with a variety of models, and improve our ability to predict how planktonic food webs change through space and time, and how those changes impact the productivity of higher trophic levels including commercially important fish. In addition, the NES-LTER project will have multifaceted broader impacts, including collaboration with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA), Northeast Fisheries Science Center to support multispecies, ecosystem-based management on the NES. The project includes an education plan that will provide opportunities to a broad range of learners and a far-reaching public outreach component will be developed through NOAA's international Science-On-a-Sphere network. While patterns of ecosystem change over seasons to decades have already been documented in this region, the key mechanisms linking changes in the physical environment, planktonic food webs, and higher trophic levels remain poorly understood. For this reason, predictive capability is limited and management strategies are largely reactive.

To address these needs, the NES-LTER strategy combines observations that provide regional-scale context, process cruises along a high gradient cross-shelf transect, high-frequency time series at inner- and outer-shelf locations, coupled biological-physical food web models, and targeted population models. The research plan is guided by an overarching science question: How is long-term environmental change impacting the pelagic NES ecosystem and, in particular, affecting the relationship between compositional (e.g., species diversity and size structure) and aggregate (e.g., rates of primary production, and transfer of energy to important forage fish species) variability? By capitalizing on high levels of seasonal and interannual variability in the NES, the research will study short-term responses to change in the environment to a) characterize low and high export food webs, b) understand the linkages and transfer of energy from the phytoplankton to pelagic fish, and c) identify the mechanisms that underlie shifts between high and low export communities. Ultimately, mechanistic knowledge will be scaled up to understand and predict the impacts and feedbacks associated with trends in decadal-scale forcing in the ecosystem.

Read Less
History:
The NES-LTER site formally became an LTER site starting in September 2017. The site builds on decades of existing regional observations and on-going time series from the Martha's Vineyard Coastal Observatory (MVCO), the Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) Pioneer Array, and NOAA-supported Ecosystem Monitoring (EcoMon) surveys.

Location

Latitude: 40.6967
Longitude: -70.8833
Biome: Marine
View Map

Grant History:

    LTER-02: OCE–2322676
    LTER: Scales of Variability in Ecosystem Dynamics and Production on the Changing Northeast U.S. Shelf (NES II)
    Start Date: September 1, 2023

    LTER-01: OCE–1655686
    LTER: Linking Pelagic Community Structure with Ecosystem Dynamics and Production Regimes on the Changing Northeast US Shelf
    Start Date: September 1, 2017

Updated June 12, 2025

Key Research Findings

alewives WHOI_f.jpg
Decadal Changes in Zooplankton Abundance and Fish Distributions
Spatiotemporal Dynamics in Microzooplankton
Shifts in Phytoplankton Phenology are Associated With Warming Trends

View all key research findings
for this site

Northeast U.S. Shelf LTER News

flux tower under a threatening sky at a dryland site
Site Exchange Fellows Announced
Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR) Workshop 2025
Northeast U.S. Shelf Long-Term Ecological Research (NES-LTER) Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REUs)
Coastal-Heartland Marine Biology Summer Research Exchange Program | WHOI, KU
Northeast U.S. Shelf Long-Term Ecological Research (NES-LTER) Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REUs)
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URI scientists investigate effects of marine heat wave on ocean life off southern New England
Abundance and Biovolume of Taxonomically-Resolved Phytoplankton and Microzooplankton Imaged Continuously Underway with an Imaging FlowCytobot Along the NES-LTER Transect in Winter 2018
Dr. Kristen Hunter-Cervera working with the FlowCytobot.
Sixteen years of Syn: new insight into longterm ocean microbe dynamics
Jellyfish and Krill in Antarctica by Cynthia Ruben and Susanne Menden-Deuer, 2017
Collaboration with artist Cynthia Rubin (NES)
Ying Yang by Garret Bentley and Ness Uitti, 2018. Inspired by work at WHOI researcher Ann Tarrant's lab.
STEAM with Falmouth High School (NES)
Mike Neubert recognized as ESA Fellow
colorful coral reef
2018 NSF LTER Symposium: Understanding Our Ocean Connections
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Long-term Study Focuses on New England Ocean
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New Long-Term Effort to Understand Impact of Rapidly Changing Atlantic
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New effort to understand the impact of the changing Atlantic
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© 2025 LTER. Managed by LTER Network Office, NCEAS, UCSB, 1021 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101
Except where otherwise noted, material may be re-used under a Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 license.

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant # 1545288, 10/1/2015-9/30/19 and # 1929393, 09/01/2019-08/31/2024, and # 2419138, 08/01/2024-present . Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in the material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

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