
enlarge image
Albatross IV. (Credit: NOAA). |
|
The Albatross IV faces a great swell. (Credit: NOAA) |
|
|
Albatross IV 1963 - 2008
The 187-foot Albatross IV, designed by Dwight S. Simpson and Associates of Boston and built by the Southern Shipbuilding Corporation of Slidell, Louisiana, was designed specifically to conduct fisheries and oceanographic research. The first stern trawler to be built in the United States, the vessel was commissioned in May 9, 1963 and departed on its first research cruise five days later from the Woods Hole Laboratory of what today is the National Marine Fisheries Service. Secretary of the Interior Steward L. Udall participated in those ceremonies.
Albatross IV has spent much of its career conducting resource surveys assessing the health and population structure of finfish and scallops on the Northeast continental shelf, marine mammal surveys, and studies of plankton and larval fish abundance. The bulk of its work, however, has been conducting annual spring and fall bottom trawl surveys, helping to provide the foundation for managing fishery resources and for ecological research, and contributing significantly to the NEFSC’s unique data library, including the world’s longest time series of standardized fishery population data.
The decommissioning of the ship on November 20, 2008 at its home port in Woods Hole, Mass., marks the end of an era for research ships that bear the name Albatross.
# # #
NOAA Fisheries Service is dedicated to protecting and preserving our nation’s living marine resources and their habitat through scientific research, management and enforcement. NOAA Fisheries Service provides effective stewardship of these resources for the benefit of the nation, supporting coastal communities that depend upon them, and helping to provide safe and healthy seafood to consumers and recreational opportunities for the American public.
NOAA understands and predicts changes in the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages our coastal and marine resources. Visit http://www.noaa.gov. |