沿海社区综合监测系统

R. Flagg, M. Otokiak, M. Hoeberechts, Lucianne M. Marshall
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引用次数: 2

摘要

世界上大约40%的人口居住在离海岸100公里以内的地方,对这些人赖以生存的海洋环境进行持续监测是至关重要的。幸运的是,沿海社区处于理想的位置,通过利用他们对周围环境的知识和理解,并利用现有的社区基础设施来支持一系列互补的监测系统,在这项工作中发挥主导作用。加拿大海洋网络公司(ONC)在加拿大东西海岸和北极地区运营海洋观测站,不断收集实时数据,用于科学研究,帮助社区、政府和行业做出有关未来的明智决策。ONC以其位于不列颠哥伦比亚省南部近海的NEPTUNE和VENUS电缆观测站以及支持海洋传感器健康监测和故障排除、资产管理、数据捕获、QA/QC、元数据、数据交付、数据产品和网络服务的海洋2.0数据管理系统而闻名。基于VENUS和NEPTUNE的安装和维护所获得的经验和专业知识,以及海洋2.0提供的数据管理基础,加拿大海洋网络提高了其监测海洋的能力。ONC对有线社区观测站和社区主导的监测计划的世界领先理解,通过使用专用的移动应用软件,利用移动海洋学和气象仪器的进步。剑桥湾,NU天文台为许多仪器制造商提供了在极端北极条件下测试和展示其技术的机会,同时为全球科学和当地北极社区提供了广泛的持久实时数据。自2012年安装以来,剑桥湾天文台物理基础设施和数据的使用越来越多,对其持续成功运行的依赖程度越来越高,对其能力的需求也越来越大。事实上,剑桥湾居民对这个特殊的社区观测站的支持不断增加,他们为观测站的维护提供后勤援助,参与外展和正式的学习活动,最近还收集了关于雪深和冰厚的关键冬季数据。作为ONC智能海洋系统计划的一部分,它的成功使许多社区天文台在不列颠哥伦比亚省海岸得到扩展。同时,社区成员自己收集的数据(通常被称为“公民科学”)是一个随着技术、数据需求和收集技术的变化而不断发展的概念。这种方法在沿海社区具有显著的潜力,因为居住在那里的人们毫无疑问是最适合在实地收集数据的。他们对当地环境的了解以及在独特的沿海环境中工作的风险和挑战仍然是无与伦比的,这使他们能够在所有季节中在相对较大的区域捕获关键数据。此外,据估计,北极地区的研究费用是温带地区的8倍[1]。社区方法往往具有成本效益,因为它利用了地方资源,在数据和受其影响最大的人之间提供了经常被忽视的联系,而且它有可能将地方知识和传统知识整合到决策过程中。成熟的公民科学项目,例如由ONC支持和共同开发的项目,努力利用这些社区知识,并将其与资金和人力时间相结合,为极有能力和意愿的人群提供设备和培训。这篇文章将讨论ONC社区天文台和公民科学计划中使用的技术和仪器的范围。它还将展示社区、技术和所产生的数据之间的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Integrated Monitoring Systems for Coastal Communities
With approximately 40 percent of the world's population living within 100 km of the coast, it is critical that the ocean environment upon which these people depend be persistently monitored. Fortunately, coastal communities are ideally situated to take the leading role in this effort by leveraging their knowledge and understanding of the surrounding environment and by taking advantage of existing community infrastructure to support a range of complementary monitoring systems. Ocean Networks Canada (ONC) operates ocean observatories on the west and east coasts of Canada and the Arctic and continuously gathers data in real-time for scientific research that helps communities, governments, and industry make informed decisions about the future. ONC is best known for its NEPTUNE and VENUS cabled observatories located off-shore southern British Columbia, and for the Oceans 2.0 data management system that supports ocean sensor health monitoring and troubleshooting, asset management, data capture, QA/QC, metadata, data delivery, data products, and web services. Building on the experience and expertise garnered from the installation and maintenance of VENUS and NEPTUNE, and on the data management foundation provided by Oceans 2.0, Ocean Networks Canada has advanced its capacity to monitor the ocean. ONC's world leading understanding of cabled community observatories and community-led monitoring programs leverages advancements in mobile oceanographic and meteorological instruments by making use of purpose-built mobile application software. The Cambridge Bay, NU observatory has provided a number of instrument manufacturers with opportunities to test and demonstrate their technologies under extreme Arctic conditions while simultaneously providing a wide range of persistent, real-time data to both the global science and local Arctic communities. Since the installation in 2012, the growing use of the Cambridge Bay observatory physical infrastructure and data has increased reliance on its continued successful operation and increased demand on its capabilities. In fact, support for this particular community observatory continues to grow with Cambridge Bay residents providing logistic assistance for observatory maintenance, participating in outreach and formal learning activities, and, more recently, collecting critical, winter-time data on snow depth and ice thickness. Its success enabled the expansion of a number of community observatories across the BC coast, as part of ONC's Smart Ocean SystemsTM program. Meanwhile, data collected by community members themselves (commonly referred to as “citizen science”) is a concept that continues to evolve with changing technology, data demands, and collection techniques. This method has remarkable potential in coastal communities, as the people who live there are, without question, the best suited to be collecting data in the field. Their understanding of the local environment and the risks and challenges of working in their unique coastal environments remains unparalleled, allowing them to capture critical data in a relatively large area through all of the seasons. Moreover, Arctic research is estimated to cost eight-times that of work in temperate regions [1]. A community approach tends to be cost effective by taking advantage of local resources, providing an often-overlooked connection between the data and the people it affects the most, and it has the potential to integrate local and traditional knowledge into the decision-making process. Mature citizen science programs, such as those being supported and co-developed by ONC, endeavor to leverage this community knowledge and to pair it with the funds and person time needed to supply the equipment and training to a population that is extremely capable and willing. This contribution will discuss the range of technologies and instrumentation used in ONC's community observatories and citizen science programs. It will also present the relationship between the communities, the technology, and the data that are produced.
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