Abstract
Species and habitats are the subjects of legislation that mandates reporting of information on ecosystem conditions. Improvements in sensors, sampling platforms, information systems, and collaborations among experts and information users now enables more effective and up-to-date information to meet regional and national needs. Specifically, advances in environmental DNA (eDNA)-based assessments of biodiversity, community science data, various underwater imaging devices, and environmental, behavioral, and physiology observations from animal telemetry provide new opportunities to address multiple requirements for reporting status and trends, including insights into life in the deep ocean. Passive and active acoustic sensors help monitor marine life, boat traffic, and noise pollution. Satellites provide repeated, frequent, and long-term records of many relevant variables from global to local scales and, when combined with numerical computer simulations, allow planning for future scenarios. Metadata standards facilitate the transfer of data from machine to machine, thus streamlining assessments and forecasting and providing knowledge directly to the public. The Marine Biodiversity Observation Network (MBON) facilitates this exchange of information on life in the sea. The collaborative efforts of the Central and Northern California Ocean Observing System (CeNCOOS) of the US Integrated Ocean Observing System and its partners provide an example of a regional MBON process for information delivery. This includes linking policy and management needs, prioritizing observing data from various platforms and methods, streamlining data handling practices, and delivery of information for management such as for the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem, with iterative process adaptation.
Highlights
Managers of coastal and marine resources need the most current information on changing marine life and environmental conditions
We assessed which existing and developing observation programs would satisfy multiple management requirements related to Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS) Essential Ocean Variables (EOVs), Sanctuary Condition Report questions (ONMS, 2018), and Integrated Ecosystem Assessment (IEA) program focal areas (Figure 1a, Table 1)
Tools available in the Central and Northern California Ocean Observing System (CeNCOOS) and Marine Biodiversity Observation Network (MBON) portals have been developed that quantify changes in regional climate variation, sea surface temperature, heat content, surface currents, wave height and direction, and net primary production, and these can be combined with observations of habitat, biomass, community composition and/
Summary
Managers of coastal and marine resources need the most current information on changing marine life and environmental conditions. This Sanctuaries MBON was designed to define essential variables for biological monitoring (Muller-Karger et al, 2018) and to develop eDNA method and application pipelines (Chavez et al, 2021, in this issue), diversity and species richness indices (Santora et al, 2017), assessments of changing biogeographical seascapes (Kavanaugh et al, 2021, in this issue), and data management and information tools to underpin delivery of each of these (e.g., Benson et al, 2021, in this issue), and to provide information for Monterey Bay and Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuaries.
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