Abstract

Coastal ecosystems are rapidly changing due to human-caused global warming, rising sea level, changing circulation patterns, sea ice loss, and acidification that in turn alter the productivity and composition of marine biological communities. In addition, regional pressures associated with growing human populations and economies result in changes in infrastructure, land use, and other development; greater extraction of fisheries and other natural resources; alteration of benthic seascapes; increased pollution; and eutrophication. Understanding biodiversity is fundamental to assessing and managing human activities that sustain ecosystem health and services and mitigate humankind’s indiscretions. Remote-sensing observations provide rapid and synoptic data for assessing biophysical interactions at multiple spatial and temporal scales and thus are useful for monitoring biodiversity in critical coastal zones. However, many challenges remain because of complex bio-optical signals, poor signal retrieval, and suboptimal algorithms. Here, we highlight four approaches in remote sensing that complement the Marine Biodiversity Observation Network (MBON). MBON observations help quantify plankton functional types, foundation species, and unique species habitat relationships, as well as inform species distribution models. In concert with in situ observations across multiple platforms, these efforts contribute to monitoring biodiversity changes in complex coastal regions by providing oceanographic context, contributing to algorithm and indicator development, and creating linkages between long-term ecological studies, the next generations of satellite sensors, and marine ecosystem management.

Highlights

  • CURRENT SCIENCE AND FUTURE STEPSWaters off the Alaskan coast usually come alive each spring with blooms of phytoplankton, visible in this image of the Chukchi Sea acquired on June 18, 2018, by the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8

  • Multiple stressors to coastal ecosystems associated with global change include warming waters, rising sea level, reduced oxygen, reduced pH, changing productivity, and sea ice loss (Gruber, 2011; Doney et al, 2012; Mathis et al, 2014), and these are in addition to changes in water quality associated with upland land use, nutrient pollution, and coastal infrastructure

  • Advances in observational capacity have led to improved characterization of dynamic habitat, better tracking of organisms as they move through habitats, and improved modeling of specieshabitat relationships

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Summary

CURRENT SCIENCE AND FUTURE STEPS

Waters off the Alaskan coast usually come alive each spring with blooms of phytoplankton, visible in this image of the Chukchi Sea acquired on June 18, 2018, by the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8. Image credit: NASA/US Geological Survey/Norman Kuring/Kathryn Hansen

INTRODUCTION
SSH CDOM
Population Ecosystem SPATIAL SCALE
Seascape Class
Reflectance at Different Depths Over Patch Reefs
ARTICLE CITATION
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