Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium

There are several exciting examples of scientific collaboration regarding ocean acidification (OA) to highlight. At the state level, the Washington state legislature established the Washington Ocean Acidification Center (WOAC) in July, 2013. A principal goal of the Center is to implement five action...

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Main Author: Killebrew, Nicole
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Western CEDAR 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2014ssec/Day2/230
https://cedar.wwu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1356&context=ssec
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spelling ftwestwashington:oai:cedar.wwu.edu:ssec-1356 2023-05-15T17:49:15+02:00 Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium Killebrew, Nicole 2014-05-01T22:30:00Z application/pdf https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2014ssec/Day2/230 https://cedar.wwu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1356&context=ssec English eng Western CEDAR https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2014ssec/Day2/230 https://cedar.wwu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1356&context=ssec This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103, USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Records, University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University. Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology text 2014 ftwestwashington 2022-09-14T05:57:33Z There are several exciting examples of scientific collaboration regarding ocean acidification (OA) to highlight. At the state level, the Washington state legislature established the Washington Ocean Acidification Center (WOAC) in July, 2013. A principal goal of the Center is to implement five actions recommended by the Washington Blue Ribbon Panel on Ocean Acidification and endorsed by the legislature (http://coenv.washington.edu/research/major-initiatives/ocean-acidification/). The work underway on these actions, which includes integrated monitoring, experimental work on local species, and modeling of OA conditions, will be presented. On the regional to national level, the Northwest Association of Networked Ocean Observing Systems (NANOOS) has been working with the US Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) and NOAA’s Ocean Acidification Program to integrate observations, data, and stakeholders, including shellfish growers and local and tribal natural resource managers. NANOOS’s data delivery system serves data streams from diverse partners, like NOAA PMEL, UW, Taylor Shellfish, Lummi Shellfish/Pacific Shellfish Institute, and the Seattle Aquarium, through its visualization system (NVS: http://nvs.nanoos.org/). This data system connects to national databases via IOOS and also to the global scale. UW and NOAA have played key roles to foster international coordination on OA observing. The plan defining a Global OA Observing Network stemmed from a 2012 NOAA workshop UW hosted with scientists from 23 nations. The Center is well connected to these national and global efforts. WOAC is also playing a key role in promoting other ocean acidification relevant activities that include coordination with the Seattle Aquarium. UW has long partnered with NOAA PMEL to observe OA in PNW waters (e.g., Feely et al., 2010); this effort includes NOAA PMEL sensors located at the Seattle Aquarium. More recently, the Center is partnering with NOAA PMEL, the Seattle Aquarium, and the XPRIZE Foundation in their effort to test new ... Text Ocean acidification Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research)
op_collection_id ftwestwashington
language English
topic Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology
spellingShingle Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology
Killebrew, Nicole
Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium
topic_facet Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology
description There are several exciting examples of scientific collaboration regarding ocean acidification (OA) to highlight. At the state level, the Washington state legislature established the Washington Ocean Acidification Center (WOAC) in July, 2013. A principal goal of the Center is to implement five actions recommended by the Washington Blue Ribbon Panel on Ocean Acidification and endorsed by the legislature (http://coenv.washington.edu/research/major-initiatives/ocean-acidification/). The work underway on these actions, which includes integrated monitoring, experimental work on local species, and modeling of OA conditions, will be presented. On the regional to national level, the Northwest Association of Networked Ocean Observing Systems (NANOOS) has been working with the US Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) and NOAA’s Ocean Acidification Program to integrate observations, data, and stakeholders, including shellfish growers and local and tribal natural resource managers. NANOOS’s data delivery system serves data streams from diverse partners, like NOAA PMEL, UW, Taylor Shellfish, Lummi Shellfish/Pacific Shellfish Institute, and the Seattle Aquarium, through its visualization system (NVS: http://nvs.nanoos.org/). This data system connects to national databases via IOOS and also to the global scale. UW and NOAA have played key roles to foster international coordination on OA observing. The plan defining a Global OA Observing Network stemmed from a 2012 NOAA workshop UW hosted with scientists from 23 nations. The Center is well connected to these national and global efforts. WOAC is also playing a key role in promoting other ocean acidification relevant activities that include coordination with the Seattle Aquarium. UW has long partnered with NOAA PMEL to observe OA in PNW waters (e.g., Feely et al., 2010); this effort includes NOAA PMEL sensors located at the Seattle Aquarium. More recently, the Center is partnering with NOAA PMEL, the Seattle Aquarium, and the XPRIZE Foundation in their effort to test new ...
format Text
author Killebrew, Nicole
author_facet Killebrew, Nicole
author_sort Killebrew, Nicole
title Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium
title_short Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium
title_full Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium
title_fullStr Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium
title_full_unstemmed Ocean Acidification - A Collaborative Response at the Seattle Aquarium
title_sort ocean acidification - a collaborative response at the seattle aquarium
publisher Western CEDAR
publishDate 2014
url https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2014ssec/Day2/230
https://cedar.wwu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1356&context=ssec
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference
op_relation https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2014ssec/Day2/230
https://cedar.wwu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1356&context=ssec
op_rights This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103, USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Records, University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University.
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