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Volume CXXXIII, Number 11
November 30, 2001
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Schubel speaks on the Gulf of Maine
CONOR WILLIAMS
STAFF WRITER

Last Tuesday afternoon, Bowdoin's Environmental Studies Department hosted President and CEO of the New England Aquarium in Boston, MA, Dr. Jerry R. Schubel. His talk centered around an upcoming effort to take a Census of Marine Life (CoML), and the current state of the Gulf of Maine, a project he helped initiate. Schubel holds degrees from Alma College and Harvard University, as well as a Ph. D in Oceanography from Johns Hopkins University. His talk was entitled, "Scientists & the Future of the Gulf of Maine: What Roles Should They Play?"

"Where you see scientists," Schubel said, "I want you to read not just natural and physical scientists, but social scientists as well."

Schubel went on to assert that the Gulf of Maine will be an "environmental battlefield" over the next decade. Historically, the Gulf has been commercially overexploited; the regional extermination of cod, puffins, and the near extinction of the right whale are salient examples. Such usage in the past has hurt the coast's "sense of place," according to Schubel.

"Without the fishing villages, I don't think it would be Maine," he said, "and without fishing, there would be no fishing villages…the 'sense of place' is as much a function of human activities as nature's."

For Schubel, this is justification for conscientious monitoring and ecosystem management in the Gulf. He used a theatrical analogy to portray the Gulf, with individual species, including humans, playing their parts on a stage unique in the world represented by the Gulf's special composition.

"The Gulf has all the elements of great theatre," said Schubel, citing the many ecosystem changes and large tidal variations as plot twists, and humans as the complex leading characters in the "play," alternating between villains and heroes. The interactions between the environment and its non-human and human inhabitants foreshadow towards the end of the play, Schubel noted. Still, the outcome is very much a continual finish, as adaptive behavior can always affect the consequences.

"This is a very dynamic system. Very stressful," said Schubel "Life [in the Gulf of Maine] favors the generalist, rather than the specialist…If you're gonna live in the Gulf of Maine, you'd better be a generalist, so you can cope with dramatic changes in the environment."

At the same time, Schubel noted that the systems in the Gulf are very "tough and resilient," and are conducive to human management. In order to ensure that the "play" ends satisfactorily, he has joined with other leading oceanographic experts in advocating the CoML project, a ten-year, one billion dollar project. This will help answer three questions: "What lived in the sea before significant human impacts?", "What lives in the sea?", and "What will live in the sea?"

From these, Schubel hopes that inferences can be made concerning the interactions between different groups of animals and their environment as well.
This project will begin with a pilot program in the Gulf of Maine, involving "smart buoys," radar, and satellite imaging, under the heading of the Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System (GoMOOS). Ideally, this program will be continued across the globe as the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS).

Schubel concluded his talk with a challenge to the audience and the Bowdoin community to initiate an "aquatic forum" on campus as a mechanism for the development of a Marine Protection Area (MPA) for the Gulf. He believes that the College could take a leadership role in what he feels will be a contentious issue in the near future. Such MPAs allow for societal management of aquatic resources based on expert opinion acquired in the aforementioned forum. The key to this is maintaining open communications between contending interests and persistence in developing compromises.

"Society has a role in deciding what we want the Gulf of Maine to be," he said.