Monitoring for Restoration Ocean Leadership 2012 Public Policy Forum The Science of Ocean, Coastal, and Great Lakes Restoration W. C. Boicourt University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Planning for NOAA’s Climate Interests
Advertisements

Gulf Hypoxia and its Impact on Ohio Municipalities.
NOAA and OAR Approaches to Research Planning Alexander E. MacDonald PhD Deputy Assistant Administrator for Laboratories and Cooperative Institutes Office.
Office of Oceanic & Atmospheric Research (OAR) Richard W. Spinrad, Ph.D., CMarSci Assistant Administrator Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research National.
Dr. Jane Lubchenco Under Secretary for Oceans and Atmosphere National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration May 11, 2009 FY 2010 Budget Summary.
Progress Towards a Regional Coastal Ocean Observing System for the Southeast (SEACOOS) Harvey Seim / University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University.
NOAA’s Habitat Blueprint- a multiagency approach to climate adaptation and increasing resiliency along the Sonoma coast Sonoma Adaptation Forum April 8,
Ocean Observations: Present and Future Capitol Hill Oceans Week June 10, 2004 Brig. Gen. David L. Johnson, USAF (Ret.) NOAA Assistant Administrator for.
The Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System. Technical Program Real time monitoring and forecasts of: Weather - surface ocean winds, air temperature, visibility.
HSRP Spring Meeting May 4, 2011 David M. Kennedy.
U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) Enabling decision making every day; Fostering advances in science and technology.
Community Resilience: It Takes A Village Civil Society Leadership Symposium December 8, 2009 Margaret A. Davidson NOAA’s Coastal Services Center.
Ecosystem Forecasting Testbed David J. Schwab NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory.
Transitioning a Chesapeake Bay Ecological Prediction System to Operations January 24, 2012 D. Green 1, C. Brown 1, F. Aikman 1, A. Siebers 1, H. Tolman.
FROM THERE TO HERE AND THE FUTURE Robert M. White NOAA Leadership Seminar August 25, 2004 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Only the good die young: bottom water hypoxia as a mortality source for copepod eggs and nauplii in Chesapeake Bay Michael Roman, David Elliot and Jamie.
JCOMM Data Buoy Cooperation Panel October 16, 2006 National Data Buoy Center 2006 Review: A Year of Growth Paul F. Moersdorf, PhD, Director.
Center for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR) Review 09 – 11 March 2010 Image: MODIS Land Group, NASA GSFC March 2000 Commerce and Transportation.
James H. Butler, Acting Director NOAA Strategic Planning Moving NOAA into the 21 st Century Third GOES-R User Conference May 2004, Boulder, Colorado.
Sustaining Natural Resources U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE PROGRAMS AND SERVICES WORKSHOP NOVEMBER 17-18, 2009 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
2007 Climate Workshop NWS Eastern Region and Southern Region Chet Ropelewski Climate Assessment and Services Division NOAA Climate Program Office (CPO)
January NWS and Social Science Jennifer M. Sprague Strategic Planning & Policy Office National Weather Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
NOAA Ocean Acidification Program Dr. Libby Jewett, Director Public Policy Forum March 6,2013.
Josie Quintrell, NFRA Executive Director October, 2010 MACOORA Board Meeting.
1 Dead Zones – Impacts on U.S. Waters. 2 What are Dead Zones? Lingcod from Dead Zone in Hood Canal, Puget Sound Fish kill caused by Dead Zone in Corsica.
Economic Benefits from (Better) Ocean Observation Capitol Hill Oceans Week 14 June 2006 Hauke Kite-Powell Marine Policy Center Woods Hole Oceanographic.
CORE Public Policy Forum Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., U.S. Navy (Ret.) Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere NOAA Administrator.
Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies The Harte Model - A synergy of science, economics and policy for a sustainable Gulf of Mexico.
EPA and Ecosystem-Based Management: Success of the Watershed Approach Michael H. Shapiro Deputy Assistant Administrator for Water, US EPA Capitol Hill.
Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory Review – Ann Arbor, MI November 15-19, Click to edit Master text styles –Second level Third level.
Management of the Hypoxic Zone – the Driver Making the Connection Between Management Issues and Monitoring Design Summit on Long-Term Monitoring of the.
Center for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR) Review 09 – 11 March 2010 Image: MODIS Land Group, NASA GSFC March 2000 Presented by Menghua Wang.
Great Lakes Observing System Regional Association in IOOS Participating Org. in GEO Bi-national 501c3 Focus Areas Ecosystem Health Public Health/ Water.
Science, Society, & Outcomes: Building a New Basis for Meteorology and Climate Science by Michael M. Crow Professor of Science Policy, School of International.
Department of Commerce Workshop San Juan, Puerto Rico 17 November 2009 Laura Furgione Assistant Administrator for Program Planning and Integration National.
NOAA 101 Sarah Schoedinger NOAA, Office of Education November 2, 2006 An overview of the agency for the NOAA/NSTA Symposium on the Ocean’s Role in Weather.
Water Quality Ru Morrison, NERACOOS Pixie Hamilton, USGS Water Quality John Haines, USGS, Pixie Hamilton, USGS, Ru Morrison, NERACOOS, Mario Tamburri,
The Physical Observing System: From Monitoring and Predicting Hazards to Long Term Changes Doug Wilson Co-Chairman, IOCARIBE-GOOS U.S. NOAA GEO CZCP Workshop.
Hydrographic Services Review Panel October 12, 2010.
Bay Guidance Programs. The Bay Program partnership includes: 19 federal agencies Nearly 40 state agencies and programs in DE, MD, NY, PA, VA,
1 NOAA Priorities for an Ecosystem Approach to Management A Presentation to the NOAA Science Advisory Board John H. Dunnigan NOAA Ecosystem Goal Team Lead.
This project is supported by the NASA Interdisciplinary Science Program The Estuarine Hypoxia Component of the Coastal Ocean Modeling Testbed: Providing.
Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory Review – Ann Arbor, MI November 15-19, Click to edit Master text styles –Second level Third level.
NOAA: Managing Our Nation's Fisheries 1 1 Managing Our Nation’s Fisheries II Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., U.S. Navy (Ret.) Under Secretary.
Indirect effects of coastal hypoxia on planktivore habitat: implications for pelagic food webs and fisheries Stuart Ludsin, Stephen Brandt & Doran Mason.
FY 2011 NOAA BUDGET SUMMARY Dr. Jane Lubchenco Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans & Atmosphere & NOAA Administrator.
Tidal Monitoring and Analysis Workgroup (TMAW) Meeting February 7, 2013 Annapolis, MD Katie Foreman and Liza Hernandez University of Maryland Center for.
90 th Annual Meeting of the American Meteorological Society Dr. Jane Lubchenco Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere & NOAA Administrator.
MARACOOS Stakeholder Input Session MARACOOS as the Backbone of Ocean Observing in the MidAtlantic: recent developments around support of marine fisheries.
State Agency Needs for Remote Sensing Data Related to Water Quality By Bob Van Dolah Marine Resources Research Institute South Carolina Department of Natural.
IP & Weather Decision Models VADM Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr. US Navy (Ret.) Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans & Atmosphere NOAA Administrator November.
Striped bass scales and life history tales: Elizabeth North UMCES Horn Point Laboratory fish and physics in Chesapeake Bay
NOAA’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO IOOS Michael Szabados NOAA’s, National Ocean Service.
 18 O Water Mass Tracer Studies RUSALCA 2004, 2009, 2012 Lee Cooper Jackie Grebmeier Dana Biasatti University of Maryland Center for Environmental Sciences.
U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey MACOORA 4 th Annual Meeting Understanding the Coastal Ocean: Partnerships for a Changing World--
Marine Sciences Oceanography Marine Biology Geosciences Using the sciences and technology to solve problems and answer questions related to oceans, coasts.
Sustainable Beaches: Weather Impacts VADM Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr. US Navy (Ret.) Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere NOAA Administrator.
National Center for Coastal Ocean Science Environmental Management System Implementation August 2005.
A U.S. non-profit Corporation Recipient of NOAA planning grants and Congressionally directed funding Membership to include federal, state, provincial.
Data Management Scope and Strategies K.L. Sender and J.L. Pappas Information and Technical Services National Marine Fisheries Service Southwest Fisheries.
CONTEXT FOR THE REVIEW Gary Matlock, Ph.D. Deputy Assistant Administrator for Programs and Administration (A) Office of Oceanic & Atmospheric Research.
Ellen L. Mecray National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Eastern Region Climate Services Director Taunton, MA
Marine Science in Alaska: 2005 Symposium Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., U.S. Navy (Ret.) Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans & Atmosphere.
Hypoxia Forecasts as a Tool for Chesapeake Bay Fisheries
NOAA’s Next Generation Great Lakes Operational Forecasting System (GLOFS) and Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab Modeling and Forecasting Capabilities.
Multi-year Trends and Event Response
Effect combined IMPACT on achieving outcomes Organizational OUTPUTS
Development and Transition of Operational
D. Green1, C. Brown1, F. Aikman1, A. Siebers1, H. Tolman1, M. Ji1, D
Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research
Presentation transcript:

Monitoring for Restoration Ocean Leadership 2012 Public Policy Forum The Science of Ocean, Coastal, and Great Lakes Restoration W. C. Boicourt University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Horn Point Laboratory Monitoring for Restoration Ocean Leadership 2012 Public Policy Forum The Science of Ocean, Coastal, and Great Lakes Restoration W. C. Boicourt University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Horn Point Laboratory

22 Monitoring For a Purpose: Restoration For a Purpose: Restoration To track and adapt restoration efforts To track and adapt restoration efforts To justify costs and show progress toward goal To justify costs and show progress toward goal Science crucial to the outcome Science crucial to the outcome Efficiency and Effectiveness: do it smarter Efficiency and Effectiveness: do it smarter Continual Information in the presence of short-term variability Continual Information in the presence of short-term variability

33 How do we do it? Ensure science is integral component Ensure science is integral component Sentinel Measurements Sentinel Measurements Analysis Analysis Provide continual assessment and updates even in a highly variable system Provide continual assessment and updates even in a highly variable system Exploit New Technology Exploit New Technology Satellites Satellites Robots Robots Models Models Share the load Share the load

Example: Dead Zone: 2010 N. Rabalais

Fisheries 5

Fisheries 6 Richardson et al., 2009

Dead Zone: Chesapeake Bay Dissolved Oxygen

RU-WRF Atmospheric Forecast Model Example: Hurricanes

NOAA Example: Oil Spill

11 Monitoring For a Purpose: Restoration For a Purpose: Restoration To track and adapt restoration efforts To track and adapt restoration efforts To justify costs and show progress toward goal To justify costs and show progress toward goal Science crucial to the outcome Science crucial to the outcome Efficiency and Effectiveness: do it smarter Efficiency and Effectiveness: do it smarter Continual Information in the presence of short-term variability Continual Information in the presence of short-term variability Cooperative Enterprise Cooperative Enterprise