NOAAS David Starr Jordan
NOAAS David Starr Jordan was an American fisheries research vessel in commission in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration from 1970 to 2010. She previously was in the United States Fish and Wildlife Services Bureau of Commercial Fisheries fleet from 1966 to 1970 as US FWS David Starr Jordan.
After the conclusion of David Starr Jordan′s NOAA career, Stabbert Maritime purchased her, renovated her, and placed her in service as the oceanographic research vessel R/V Ocean Starr.
NOAAS ''David Starr Jordan''
Construction and commissioning
David Starr Jordan was built for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service by the Christy Corporation at Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. She was launched on 19 December 1964, delivered on 5 November 1965, and commissioned into service in the Fish and Wildlife Service's Bureau of Commercial Fisheries on 8 January 1966 as US FWS David Starr Jordan in a ceremony at San Diego, California. She later was transferred to NOAA and became NOAAS David Starr Jordan in the NOAA fleet.Characteristics and capabilities
A western-rigged trawler, David Starr Jordan was designed and rigged for midwater trawling, bottom trawling, longline sets, plankton tows, oceanographic casts, ocean-bottom sample grabs, scuba diving, and visual surveys of marine mammals and seabirds. She had a hydraulic hydrographic winch with a drum capacity of of 5/16-inch line and a maximum pull of, a hydraulic hydrographic winch with a drum capacity of of 3/16-inch line and a maximum pull of, a hydraulic combination winch with a drum capacity of of 3/8-inch wire rope and a maximum pull of, and two hydraulic trawl winches, each with a drum capacity of of 5/8-inch line and a maximum pull of. She also had a telescoping boom with a lifting capacity of 11,838 pounds, an articulated boom with a lifting capacity of 4,650 pounds, and a movable A-frame.Equipped to function as a floating laboratory, David Starr Jordan had a 370-square-foot chemical oceanography laboratory, a 210-sq. ft. physical oceanography laboratory, and a 53-sq.-ft. biological oceanography laboratory. She also had a 200-sq.-ft. scientific information center that served as a data-processing laboratory and a 76-sq.-ft. constant temperature room. Her laboratories had temperature-controlled aquaria and live specimen wells, and she had a walk-in freezer, a dark room, and an underwater observation chamber in her bow and on her port side for studying fish behavior at sea.
David Starr Jordan had a helicopter platform, allowing her to host a helicopter for aerial observations and photographic survey missions. She carried three boats, an Zodiac rigid-hulled inflatable boat, an Avon RHIB, and a Boston Whaler fiberglass-hulled boat. All three boats were powered by gasoline outboard motors.
In addition to her crew of 14, David Starr Jordan could accommodate up to 13 scientists.
Service history
David Starr Jordan was built for the purpose of fisheries research in the tropical Pacific Ocean. She spent her career studying the biological and physical oceanography off the southwestern coast of the United States and in the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean off the coasts of Central America and South America in support of the management of fish, marine mammal, and sea turtle populations. Her home port was San Diego.David Starr Jordans first assignment in January 1966 was to take part in the California Cooperative Fisheries Investigation, a joint effort by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography to assess fish populations off the coast of California. It became a long-term commitment for her. During quarterly CalCOFI research cruises off southern and central California, scientists embarked aboard David Starr Jordan studied the marine environment and the management of its living resources as the ship collected hydrographic and biological data on the California Current system and monitored the indicators of El Niño events and climate change.
File:NOAAS David Starr Jordan with MD 500 helicopter.JPG|thumb|250px|left|NOAAS David Starr Jordan and NOAA's MD500 helicopter operating together during marine mammal studies in the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean.
Operated by NOAA's Office of Marine and Aviation Operations after NOAA was established on 3 October 1970, David Starr Jordan supported NOAAs National Marine Fisheries Service Southwest Fisheries Science Center Laboratory in La Jolla, California. Dolphin population assessment in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean was one of her longstanding missions, and she was an integral part of the marine mammal surveys conducted by the laboratorys Protected Resources Division, including the Stenella Abundance Research Project, a three-year study of dolphin stocks taken as incidental catch by the yellowfin tuna purse-seine fishery in the eastern tropical Pacific. When assessing dolphin populations, she operated in cooperation with NOAAs MD 500 helicopter, which provided aerial photography support; from the photographs, scientists could measure the length of individual animals and count the number of dolphins in selected schools, which then could be used to calibrate estimates of the sizes of schools of dolphins made by observers aboard David Starr Jordan. Data David Starr Jordan collected were critical in supporting the "dolphin-safe” tuna campaign and labeling requirements and led to a major reduction in dolphin mortalities related to the operations of the yellowfin tuna industry.
Researchers embarked on David Starr Jordan investigated seasonal variations in ocean temperature, currents and salinity. David Starr Jordan also conducted an annual juvenile striped bass survey, shark surveys, and occasional special research work required by the Southwest Fisheries Science Center Laboratory. She took part in several research expeditions that took her as far afield as Mexico, Peru, and the Galapagos Islands.
In all David Starr Jordan logged over and spent an estimated 8,949 days at sea, averaging over 240 days at sea per year. She measured and weighed 1,000 sea turtles, took 27,000 photographs using remotely operated vehicles, and conducted 27,000 oceanographic sampling casts, 22,000 plankton tows, and 4,700 fish trawls.
The ashes of the noted fisheries scientist Oscar Elton Sette were scattered at sea in the Pacific Ocean from the deck of David Starr Jordan on 7 September 1972.
After over 44 years of service, David Starr Jordan was decommissioned on 3 August 2010 and sold at auction on 27 May 2011.