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Anthony (Tony) F. Amos
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Research Associate, Marine Science Institute
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Physical Oceanography
Tony Amos has been with The University of Texas Marine Science Institute
in Port Aransas for the past 23 years. His oceanographic career has spanned
36 years with research expeditions to all the world's oceans and many of
its seas, including 35 cruises to the Antarctic and five to the Arctic.
He is a holder of the US Antarctic Service Medal. In Texas he has studied
several aspects of near-shore and bay and estuarine processes (circulation,
currents, hydrography, and tides) and has conducted a long-term study of
the barrier island beaches which is now in its 21st year. To date 2,950
separate surveys have been conducted, counting birds, people, marine debris,
and measuring beach widths, dune erosion/accretion, sea temperature and
salinity. In addition, over 500 separate surveys have been made specifically
to assess the marine debris problem. Amos has served on a National Academy
of Sciences/National Research Council Marine Board Committee on Shipborne
Waste, and various EPA, MMS, and other committees on the marine debris
problem. He is a member of the New York Academy of Science, Sigma Xi, the
American Geophysical Union, The American Ornithological Union, the Texas
Marine Mammal Stranding Network, the Sea Turtle Stranding and Salvage Network,
an Honorary Lifetime Member of the Texas Marine Educators Association,
and Vice-chair of NSF's Research Vessel Technical Enhancement Committee
(RVTEC). He is the Port Aransas Cooperative Weather Observer for the National
Weather Service, and writes for the Port Aransas South Jetty, The Corpus
Christi Caller-Times, and the South Texas Fishing News papers. Recently
he was selected as one of the "Texas Twenty" by Texas Monthly magazine
for his work on the environment. Tony is also the founder of the ARK (Animal
Rehabilitation Keep), a facility for helping injured sea turtles and marine
and aquatic birds.
Research Interests
Current research interests include the US Antarctic Marine Living Resources
(AMLR) program, now entering its eighth year of field study. Amos' contribution
to AMLR is a survey of the physical oceanography of the Elephant Island
region, which is a major area of krill (Euphausia superba) concentration,
and supports a krill fishery with potential to expand and target other
species. Because krill supports numerous predators (seals, whales, penguins,
and flying seabirds), the multidisciplinary AMLR project seeks to understand
the relationship between krill and its predators and the physical, chemical,
and biological environment. Work on the Texas beaches continues and now
includes a weekly survey of a remote barrier island to search for nesting
and stranded sea turtles and a study of the standing stock of marine debris
on an undisturbed beach. .
Selected Publications
Amos, A.F. (Submitted). AMLR Program: Physical Oceanography of the northern
South Shetland Island and Bransfield Strait area; summer 1999. Antarctic
Journal of the U.S. 34(5).
Amos, A.F., (in press). An interactive shipboard scientific log for
research vessels. Proceedings of the INMARTECH Conference, Scripps Institution
of Oceanography, October 27-29, 1998.
Amos, A.F., (in press). AMLR Program: an unusual South Shetlands weather
event. Ant. J. U.S. 33(5).
Amos, A.F., (in press). AMLR Program: Physical Oceanography of the Elephant
Island area, summer 1998. Ant. J. U.S. 33(5).
Amos, A.F., A.R. Wickham, and C.C. Rowe. 1997. AMLR Program: Midsummer
1997 in the Elephant Island area - a month of warm surface waters and calm
winds. Ant. J. U.S. 32(5), 135-136.
Amos, A.F., A.R. Wickham, and C.C. Rowe. 1996. AMLR Program: The 7-year
hitch - a meander in the circulation near Elephant Island. Ant. J. U.S.
31(5), 153-154.
Amos, A.F., A.R. Wickham, and C.C. Rowe. 1995. AMLR Program: Physical
Oceanography of the Elephant Island area; summer 1995. Ant. J. U.S. 30(5),
234-237.
Amos, A.F. (In prep). Late summer ocean stratification and circulation
near Elephant Island, Antarctica.
Silva, N., E.W. Helbling, V. Villafane, A.F. Amos and O. Holm-Hansen.
1995. Variability in nutrient concentration around Elephant Island, Antarctica,
during 1991-1993. Polar Res. 14(1), 69-82.
Amos, A.F. 1994. AMLR Program: The underway data acquisition system.
Ant. J. U.S. 29(5), 201-204.
Amos, A.F. 1994. AMLR Program: The mean summer windfield in the Elephant
Island area. Ant. J. U.S. 29(5), 204-206.
Amos, A.F. 1993. AMLR Program: Interannual variability in the Elephant
Island surface waters in summer. Ant. J. U.S. 28(5), 201-204.
Amos, A.F. 1993. The tides at Palmer Station. Ant. J. U.S. 28(5), 162-164.
Niiler, P.P., A.F. Amos and J.-H. Hu. 1991. Water masses and 200-db
relative geostrophic circulation in the western Bransfield Strait. Deep-Sea
Research 38(8/9A):943-959. |