Title: Seafloor Mapping and GIS for the FBNMS
1GIS Benthic Terrain Workshop
Dawn Wright and Emily Larkin Davey Jones Locker
Lab Department of Geosciences Oregon State
University, USA
2Schedule - Day 1, Mon
- 830-930 - Dawn - Intro
- 930-1000 Break - Technical Setup
- 1000-1200 Emily/Dawn - Module 1 Exploring
the Reefs - all modules include intro lecture, then hands-on
work - 1200-100 Lunch
- 130-230 Dawn Seafloor mapping techniques
and GIS analysis - 230-430 Emily/Dawn Module 2 Benthic
Classifications
3Schedule - Day 2, Tues
- 830-1030 Emily/Dawn Module 3 Spatial and
3D Analyst w/Bathymetry Data (including
hypothetical MPA) - 1030-1100 Dawn Benthic Terrain Modeler
(BTM) tool - 1100-1200 Emily American Samoa Benthic
Terrain Viewer (ASBTV) and AS Bibliographic Tool - 1200-100 Lunch
- 130 200 Wrapup, final question/discussion
period
4Tuesday, 230
- American Samoa GIS User Group Meeting
- DOC Conference Room, Pago Pago
5GIS A Spatial ContextIntegrating Many Parts to
See the Whole
Shoreline
Bathymetry
Sediments
Kelp
Conservation Value
Resilience?
Fisheries
Non-consumptive Recreational Activities
Options/Decisions
Graphics courtesy of Joe Breman, ESRI and NOAA
Biogeography Program
6Spatial Reasoning
Deciding
Measuring
Planning
Thinking
Analyzing
Science
Graphics courtesy of ESRI
7From Spatial Reasoning to Policy Management
Halpin, AAAS, 2004
From Wright and Halpin, in press, 2004, Spatial
reasoning for terra incognita Grand challenges
and progress of marine GIS, in Wright, D.J. and
Scholz, D.J. (eds.), Place Matters Geospatial
Tools for Marine Science, Conservation, and
Management in the Pacific Northwest, Corvallis,
OR Oregon State University Press.
8GIS A Spatial ContextSeeing the Whole to Manage
Places
Seeing the Whole
Managing Places
- Estuaries
- Fisheries
- Marine Protected Areas
- Coastal Communities
Graphics courtesy of ESRI
9Point Conception
Santa Barbara
From Airame, S., in press, 2004, Channel Islands
Marine Sanctuary Advancing the science and
policy of marine protected areas, in Wright, D.J.
and Scholz, D.J. (eds.), Place Matters
Geospatial Tools for Marine Science,
Conservation, and Management in the Pacific
Northwest, Corvallis, OR Oregon State University
Press.
Oregonian Bioregion
Area of Detail
Sanctuary Boundary
Californian Bioregion
State Boundary
Santa Cruz Island
San Miguel I.
Anacapa I.
Santa Rosa Island
Santa Barbara Island
Transition Zone
Effective April 9, 2003
10Flowchart of Parameters in Potential MPA GIS
By OrSt grad student Chad Keith
11Flowchart of Parameters in Potential MPA GIS
By OrSt grad student Chad Keith
12Gulf of MaineGeorges BankExample of MPA
Exclusion Areas
75 km
50 km
By OrSt grad student Chad Keith
13Fishing Patterns 1998-99
Pre-Footrope Regulation Tows 1998-1999 Reference
Site 2 Trawl Patterns Rocky Habitat
By OrSt grad student Marlene Bellman
14Fishing Patterns, 2000-01
Post-Footrope Regulation Trawl Patterns Rocky
Habitat Where is Habitat Recovery Most
Likely? Map Prediction of Resilience/Robustness??
By OrSt grad student Marlene Bellman
15Prototype Mixed Layer Depth Calculation in ArcGIS
- Bering Sea
Vance et al., NOAA AFSC, 2004
16Map courtesy of the National Park of American
Samoa
Artwork by Jayne Doucette, Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution
17OrSt and USF Bathy Surveys, 2001 to present
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21Bottom Coverage Data Density by Survey Method
Single Beam
Leadline
Multibeam
1-2 K soundings per survey
500 - 750 K soundings per survey
400,000 1,000,000 K soundings per survey
Image courtesy of NOAA UNH
22Active Remote SensingAcoustic!
- multiple, focused, high-frequency, short
wavelength sound beams - narrow-beam or multibeam bathymetry
- sound beam stays narrow and focused all the way
to the bottom - depths much more precise
- e.g., Sea Beam has 16 beams, Sea Beam 2000 has
121, EM3000 has 127, EM120 has 191
23Mapping the Ocean Floor
- Only 5 of global ocean floor charted in high rez
with ships - we need 125 more years!
Image courtesy of NOAA
24Ocean Thematic Layers
Graphic courtesy of Christina Massel, Steve
Miller, Scripps
25Multibeam Bathymetry
A Gigabyte of data an hour
A Gigabyte of data a day
26The World Ocean Floor
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29N
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Fine-Scale Mapping
- on the order of tens of meters to meters
- features the size of a beer can!
33National Marine Sanctuaries
Map courtesy of NOAA National Marine Sanctuary
System
34U.S. Coral Reef Task Force
Seeks to characterize priority reef systems
deeper than 30 m in the U.S. and Trust
Territories by 2009.
Surveys contribute to management of marine
protected areas and the possible designation of
more protected areas.
Evans et al. 2002 http//www.nodc.noaa.gov/col/pr
ojects/coral/Coralhome.html
35OrSt USFMultibeam Surveys to date
By OrSt grad student Emily Lundblad
36Shallow Multibeam(May 2001, November 2002)
- Kongsberg-Simrad EM-3000
- Fans out 121 beams at 130 deg.
- Swaths 3-4 times water depth
- Depths in 3-150 m range at survey speeds of 3-12
knots - cm-resolution w/ dGPS
37Preparations
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40Shallow Water Multibeam
41Shallow Water Multibeam (cont.)
42Measured offsets required for accurate pitch,
roll, yaw
43"curling up" of outermost beams"loss of bottom"
on very steep slopessudden heading changes
44(No Transcript)
45By OrSt grad student Emily Larkin
46Fagatele Bay National Marine Sanctuary, 2001 bathy
47 SCUBA / Rebreather Technology
Images courtesy of Kip Evans, Nat. Geographic and
Rich Pyle, Bishop Museum
48Rebreather Dive Mission, FBNMS, 2001
49Schedule - Day 1
- 830-930 - Dawn - intro lecture
- 930-1000 Break
- 1000-1200 Emily/Dawn - Module 1 Exploring
the Reefs - all modules include intro lecture, then hands-on
work - 1200-100 Lunch
- 130-230 Dawn seafloor mapping techniques
and GIS analysis - 230-430 Emily/Dawn Module 2 Benthic
Classifications
50Faafetai!
Image courtesy of FBNMS
51Schedule - Day 2, Tues
- 830-1030 Emily/Dawn Module 3 Spatial and
3D Analyst w/Bathymetry Data (including
hypothetical MPA) - 1030-1100 Dawn Josh Benthic Terrain
Modeler (BTM) tool - 1100-1200 Emily American Samoa Benthic
Terrain Viewer (ASBTV) and AS Bibliographic Tool - 1200-100 Lunch and/or Wrapup
- 130 200 Wrapup, final question/discussion
period