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Protecting the Fragile Reef Tops of Cordell
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Elephant seal on Cordell Bank. (Photo: Steve Howell) |
A local monthly radio show on KWMR was launched to reach the coastal communities of the sanctuary. The show highlights the depths and far reaches of our watery planet and includes interviews with experts about current ocean research, stewardship, management issues, and natural history, especially in our national marine sanctuaries. The show also streams live on the web, reaching a worldwide audience. Listen to a minke whale, track an albatross across the Pacific and find out how you can get involved in protecting the ocean. Listen to archived shows or subscribe to the podcast on the sanctuary Web site.
Researchers completed high-resolution, bathymetric mapping of Cordell Bank that will enhance future research, monitoring, and restoration efforts on Cordell Bank. The maps have already been used to help sanctuary staff plan the removal of derelict fishing gear on the bank. Additionally, data from the mapping effort will be used to create three-dimensional video products for sanctuary education and outreach efforts. This was a cooperative effort with the Benthic Mapping Laboratory at California State University Monterey Bay
Teachers and students learned how to design and build remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) in a workshop hosted by sanctuary staff in partnership with the Marine Advanced Technology and Education Center and Deep Ocean Exploration and Research-Marine. Eleven teachers and six high school students from around the region were treated to working directly with engineers to learn how they design ROVs and submersibles for different environments. The teachers and students then built their own ROVs out of PVC pipe and bilge pumps. The technology workshop provided valuable hands-on training for the students as they prepare for future ROV building competitions and reflects the sanctuary program’s commitment to training America’s future technology leaders.
A new partnership between the National Marine Sanctuary Program and the U.S. Coast Guard is helping sanctuary staff study potential impacts of vessel traffic in the Cordell Bank sanctuary. The U.S. Coast Guard provided software that is allowing staff to track real-time movements of all large ships carrying Automatic Identification Systems. The last six years of data determined that an average of 200 ships per month pass Cordell Bank. Understanding vessel traffic patterns is important to documenting potential threats to sanctuary marine life. The information is already proving valuable as scientists used traffic data to determine the placement of the Sanctuary Ecosystem Assessment buoy that was installed in February 2007.
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