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Tag Archives: Moloka`i
Reef monitoring cruise in the main Hawaiian Islands completed: preliminary results from fish surveys
Last Friday afternoon, Aug. 23, the NOAA Ship Hi`ialakai returned to Honolulu from a Pacific Reef Assessment and Monitoring Program (Pacific RAMP) cruise (HA-13-04) during which staff of the PIFSC Coral Reef Ecosystem Division (CRED) and partners conducted surveys of … Continue reading
Posted in coral reef ecosystem
Tagged Adel Heenan, and depth cast, ARMS, autonomous reef monitoring structures, benthic community, benthic composition, benthic sample, benthic survey, bioerosion monitoring unit, BMU, calcification accretion unit, CAU, complexity, consumer group, Coral Reef Conservation Program, Coral Reef Ecosystem Division, CRCP, CRED, cruise, CTD cast, deepwater CTD cast, depth strata, detritivore, detritus, dissolved inorganic carbon, EAR, ecological acoustic recorders, encrusting algae, eshy macroalgae, fish assemblage, fish biomass, fish monitoring brief, fish monitoring brief: main Hawaiian Islands 2013, functional group, HA-13-04, hard coral cover, hard corals, Hawaii, herbivore, Hi`ialakai, invertebrates, invertivores, Ivor Williams, Kaua`i, Lāna`i, main Hawaiian Island, Maui, microbial community, Moloka`i, monitoring, National Coral Reef Monitoring Program, Ni‘ihau, NOAA Ship, Oahu, omnivores, Pacific RAMP, Pacific Reef Assessment and Monitoring Program, preliminary results, primary consumer, Rapid Ecological Assessments REA, REA site, reef fish, salinity, secondary consumers, shallow-water conductivity, size class, soft corals, stationary point count, STR, structure, subsurface temperature recorders, survey, temperature, TL, total alkalinity, total fish biomass, total length, transect, turf algae, visual census, water sample
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Reef monitoring cruise in main Hawaiian Islands underway
By Bernardo Vargas-Ángel The Pacific Reef Assessment and Monitoring Program (Pacific RAMP) cruise in the main Hawaiian Islands, led by the PIFSC Coral Reef Ecosystem Division, is in full swing. This expedition aboard the NOAA Ship Hi`ialakai (PIFSC cruise HA-13-04) … Continue reading
Posted in coral reef ecosystem
Tagged algae, benthic, Bernardo Vargas-Ángel, biological, colony, condition, Coral Reef Conservation Program, Coral Reef Ecosystem Division, corals, CRCP, CRED, cruise, dead, demographics, diversity, fish, HA-13-04, Hawaii, health, Hi`ialakai, Honolulu, installations, instruments, Kaua`i, live, Lāna`i, Maui, Molo, Moloka`i, monitoring, National Coral Reef Monitoring Plan, Ni‘ihau, Oahu, oceanographic, Pacific RAMP, Pacific Reef Assessment and Monitoring Program, sessile organisms, status, substrate, survey, West Maui
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Researchers use underwater vehicles to survey bottomfishes near Maui Nui
By John Rooney Jeremy Taylor, Jeff Anderson, and John Rooney of the PIFSC Coral Reef Ecosystem Division are participating in a PIFSC cruise (SE-13-02) for insular bottomfish surveys on April 15–29 aboard the NOAA Ship Oscar Elton Sette in an … Continue reading
Posted in coral reef ecosystem
Tagged abundance, autonomous underwater vehicle, AUV, BlueView, bottomfish, Coral Reef Ecosystem Division, CRED, cruise, fishery-independent, Jeff Anderson, Jeremy Taylor, John Rooney, Kaho`olawe, Lāna`i, maui nui, Moloka`i, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Oscar Elton Sette, Phantom, remotely operated vehicle, ROV, SE-13-02, SeaBED, Simrad, Simrad EK60, sonar
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Fish assessment cruises in the main Hawaiian Islands: preliminary results from latest visual surveys
Coral Reef Ecosystem Division (CRED) staff members Danny Merritt, John Rooney, and Jacob Asher are participating in the PIFSC cruise SE-12-08 aboard the NOAA Ship Oscar Elton Sette, which left Honolulu on Sept. 22 for operations in the main Hawaiian … Continue reading
Posted in coral reef ecosystem
Tagged Adel Heenan, baited remote underwater video stations, biomass, BotCam, BRUVS, coral cover, Coral Reef Ecosystem Division, CRED, cruise, Danny Merritt, fish, Fish Biology and Stock Assessment Branch, fish monitoring brief, fishery-independent, Hawai`i Division of Land and Natural Resources, Huki Pono, Ivor Williams, Jacob Asher, Jill Zamzow, JIMAR, John Rooney, Joint Institute for Marine and Ecosystem Research, Kaylyn McCoy, Kevin Lino, Lāna`i, main Hawaiian islands, Marc Nadon, Maui, Moloka`i, monitoring brief, Oahu, Oscar Elton Sette, Pacific RAMP, Pacific Reef Assessment and Monitoring Program, Paula Ayotte, Rapid Ecological Assessment, REA, reef fish, Sette, SPC, stationary point count, stock assessment, TOAD, towed optical assessment device, University of Hawai`i, University of Hawai`i at Mānoa, University of Western Australia
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