Great Lakes Region


Wisconsin

Current Projects

Great Lakes Regional Support

The NOAA Coastal Services Center and the Great Lakes Commission have developed a work plan to address needs identified in an assessment. The emphasis areas include coastal community development, data and information integration and distribution, and ports and navigation. The plan includes developing coastal development case studies, updating the Great Lakes Information Network to include coastal management, and designing a data schema to standardize methods for collecting and sharing data. Ports and navigation issues include assessing impacts to infrastructure caused by climate change. (2004-2009)

C-CAP Land Cover and Change Data

The Coastal Change Analysis Program (C-CAP) is a nationally standardized database of land cover and change data within the coastal regions of the U.S. C-CAP products inventory coastal intertidal areas, wetlands, and adjacent uplands with the goal of monitoring natural and human-induced changes in these habitats on a one-to-five year cycle. Key efforts in 2008 include land cover and change maps and products developed with private-sector remote sensing contractors for the Great Lakes, Northeast, Pacific, and Caribbean Island regions. (2008 update)

Great Lakes Regional Support

A partnership between the NOAA Coastal Services Center and the Great Lakes Commission was created to deploy additional NOAA services to the Great Lakes region. A needs assessment focused on coastal community development; data and information integration and distribution; and ports and navigation. The Center’s deployment of regional staff will now be coordinated with NOAA regional collaboration efforts. A work plan will be developed with the Great Lakes Commission to meet needs identified in the assessment. (2004-2009)

Land Cover Mapping

Nothing provides a big picture view of land cover status better than these maps, which are developed using remote sensing technology. The NOAA Coastal Services Center has baseline land cover data for most of the coastal zone. The goal is to update the imagery every five years to also provide a means of detecting change or trends. The data is available free of charge from csc.noaa.gov/landcover.

Completed Projects

CZMA Bibliographies

The Center's library has cataloged NOAA's Coastal Zone Information Center collection, produced by state coastal management programs under the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA). This collection contains documents that span a number of coastal topics and includes brochures, management plans, and legislative information. A bibliography of this information for the Great Lakes states is available.

Great Lakes Land Cover and Change Data

This project mapped terrestrial land cover in coastal watershed environments and identified changes in these areas that occurred between 1995 and 2001. The project relied on satellite multispectral imagery as the primary information source. These data were used to distinguish major land cover classes, and previous images were studied to locate areas that changed over time. For this project, the data were acquired according to the Center’s Coastal Change Analysis Program (C-CAP) methods.

Identification of Conservation and Restoration Sites

Under a grant from the Center, the Wisconsin Department of Administration and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources identified potential habitat conservation and restoration sites within the Duluth/Superior watershed and assessed habitat value in the Wisconsin portion of the estuary. Although the project involved work in both Minnesota and Wisconsin, all grant funds were sent to Wisconsin because Minnesota did not have a NOAA-approved coastal zone management program at the time of award.

Remote Sensing Data Acquisition

This project provides remotely sensed coastal data products obtained through contracts with private industry. All data products meet Federal Geographic Data Committee metadata standards and are freely available to federal, state, and local coastal resource managers. To date, these funds have focused on coastal land cover development, coastal topography, and submerged aquatic vegetation.

Western Lake Superior NEMO Program

This project helps local land use officials understand the impact of nonpoint source pollution and provides the support they need to engage in proactive, watershed-based planning in the Western Lake Superior basin. Nonpoint Education of Municipal Officials (NEMO) provides the information, educational opportunities, and resources that enable local officials and community planners in the Lake Superior watershed of Minnesota and Wisconsin to envision and then create an economically and environmentally sustainable community. This project was funded with a special project grant from the Center.