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Published bySusan Pitts Modified over 9 years ago
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Data Products for Coral Reef Managers Tyler Christensen Mark Eakin NOAA Coral Reef Watch
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Using satellite data to provide current reef environmental conditions, quickly identifying areas at risk for coral bleaching
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http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/ Updated twice a week All data and images are absolutely free, and in the public domain
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Global Data Products 50km Nighttime SST SST Anomaly HotSpot Degree Heating Weeks
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‘Virtual Station’ Data Products Still using satellite data only Focus on 191 coral reef locations around the world For managers: bleaching alert e-mails
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Bottom Line for Managers Is my reef currently at risk for bleaching?
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Bottom Line for Managers Is my reef at risk for bleaching in the near future?
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Experimenting With Other Remote Sensing Products Ocean Acidification Disease Outbreak Risk Light Stress Damage Doldrums
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Bleaching Threshold Lab experiments by Glynn & D’Croz, Atwood, Goreau & Hays in early 1990s Bleaching happens when water temperature rises above a threshold When the ocean gets hot and stays hot, corals are stressed.
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Coral Reef Watch Products: Bleaching Stress from Satellites Al Strong with his USNA students 1994 breakfast with Vice President Gore
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11 Training Workshops Thirteen capacity-building workshops: American Samoa to US Virgin Islands Australia to Bonaire to Zanzibar Trained over 300 scientists and managers on: Coral Reef Watch satellite data products Predicting bleaching, assessing impacts Resilient MPAs and Response Plans Many, many partners Merged w/TNC Reef Resilience training
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Collaboration Workshops Managers talk about information needs Remote sensing scientists talk about what’s possible Series of workshops over the last 10 years or so Coming up in Australia next month!
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13 Outreach and Education http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov
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Other Interactions w/Data Users E-mail communications, Coral List Bleaching reports from the field (ReefBase, Coral List, e-mails to Al, etc.) Managers’ conferences (ITMEMS, GCFI) Photos: Caroline Rogers, USGS
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Challenges Focus has been on new trainees; need to connect with established users Lack of awareness in NESDIS/STAR about remote sensing interpreted for the management community Most ground-truthing is anecdotal
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Suggestions Involve managers from the beginning Face-to-face outreach is best Deliver interpreted products with added meaning, not just raw data Deliver in easy-to-use formats (Google Earth, online images, simple graphs, open GIS, etc.)
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