NOAA Goals
NOAA sets the following Goals to meet our Nation's economic, social and environmental needs:
Climate
Understand climate variability and change.
Weather & water
Serve society's needs for weather and water information.
Ecosystems
Protect, restore, and manage the use of coastal and ocean resources.
Commerce & transportation
Support the Nation's commerce with information for safe, efficient and environmentally sound transportation.
Supporting NOAA's mission
Provide critical support for NOAA's mission.

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NOAA STRATEGIC GOAL: Ecosystems

Protect, restore, and manage the use of coastal and ocean resources.

Fish LIDAR

The image is of two people standing in front of a small, high-wing, twin-engine aircraft.

Scientists Evelyn Brown of the University of Alaska at Fairbanks and James Churnside of ESRL preparing for a flight from Dutch Harbor Alaska to survey forage fish in the SE Bering Sea with the ESRL Fish LIDAR.


The image shows a complex pattern of darker grey against a light grey background.  The depth range is from above the surface to a depth of 30 m,  and the distance range is from 0 to 5000 m. Example of distribution of fish in "hot spot" in SE Bering Sea. Darker pixels represent a denser concentration of fish plotted against depth on the vertical axis and distance along a segment of the flight track on the horizontal axis.


Image shows a mass of tangled nets on a coral reef and two divers in wet suits. Divers removing nets from NW Hawaiian Islands. (photo by Mary Donahue)


Image shows a map of the N. Pacific with arrows representing the clockwise flow of the subtropical gyre between about 10 N and 30 N and the counter-clockwise flow of the subarctic gyre between about 40 N and about 60 N. General circulation of North Pacific Ocean. High concentrations of marine debris were located in convergence zones where the Subtropical Gyre and the Subarctic Gyre come together between 30 N and 40 N.

Ecosystem-Based Management

Fisheries management agencies worldwide, including NOAA Fisheries, are in the midst of a change from management of individual stocks of commercially important species to management of entire marine ecosystems (Ecosystem-Based Management). Each ecosystem might include several fisheries and also endangered species, whose management is also a NOAA responsibility. By understanding and monitoring each marine ecosystem, NOAA will be able to much more effectively manage living marine resources within that ecosystem. This becomes increasingly important as climate changes and population increases put more pressure on those resources. The goal is to be able to anticipate and mitigate the effects of these changes rather than respond to these effects after irreparable harm has been done.

The Need for Expanded Stock Assessments

Effective ecosystem modeling and monitoring requires much more data than is currently used in single-species stock assessments. These data include the physical, chemical, and biological properties of the habitat on all important spatial and temporal scales. Currently, much of the required data are not being collected, especially information about non-commercial prey species, juvenile fish distributions, and the distribution of non-commercial species that compete for resources. While these data could be collected using traditional techniques, the cost would be prohibitive.

ESRL Contributions

Cost Effective Remote Survey Technology

The Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) is working with NOAA Fisheries and others to develop aerial techniques that can provide information on the epipelagic (or near-surface ocean) ecosystem at a fraction of the cost of ship-based techniques. To measure the characteristics of the epipelagic ecosystem requires new techniques using expertise that has been developed within NOAA Research for atmospheric applications and is not resident within NOAA Fisheries. The primary new instrument is the NOAA Fish LIDAR, which is similar to the LIDAR used to measure clouds and aerosols in the atmosphere. This instrument can measure profiles of plankton and fish as deep as 50 m (150 ft) in the ocean from a small aircraft. Other instrumentation simultaneously measures sea-surface temperature and ocean color, from which primary productivity can be inferred.

Ghost Nets

ESRL is also concerned with a relatively new component of the marine ecosystem lost and abandoned fishing nets, or "ghost nets". Since the introduction of synthetic materials for fishing nets, ghost nets survive in the ocean for many years, continuing to kill fish, marine mammals, sea birds, and turtles. Eventually, they may become tangled in coastal structures or reefs, where they can do even more damage. The problem is particularly severe in the NW Hawaiian Islands, where divers with knives are removing nets from the coral one handful at a time. Since 2000, roughly100 tons of debris have been removed from the reefs this way each year by NOAA Fisheries. We would like to detect and remove these nets before they reach the reefs.