73,813 research outputs found

    Marine Fishes of the North Pacific

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/government_posters/1059/thumbnail.jp

    Magnified Clam Image Captures Top Award in NOAA Photo Contest

    Get PDF
    Aquatic Diagnostic Technician Kathryn Markey Lundgren’s carefully constructed image of a tiny Northern quahog wins first place in National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s aquaculture photo contest

    Population dynamics of the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) in the Hudson River: settlement and post-settlement processes

    Get PDF
    Submitted in partial fulfillment of contract requirements with NOAA, Semi-Annual Report - October 2004,Report issued on: October 2004INHS Technical Report for submission to: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA

    Characterizing the Preferences and Values of US Recreational Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Anglers

    Get PDF
    The Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Thunnus thynnus is the target of a recreational fishery along the U.S. East Coast that is thought to be of considerable economic value. In some years, recreational landings have exceeded the sector’s annual subquota due to changes in fish availability, limited predictability of angler effort, and difficulties in realtime monitoring of catch. Understanding the drivers of angler behavior is critical for predicting how effort and harvest may vary as a function of changing fish availability, regulations, or costs. To investigate angler decision making, preferences, and values, we surveyed private recreational anglers from Maine to North Carolina and employed discrete choice experiments to determine how regulatory and nonregulatory trip-specific variables influence trip-taking behavior. A latent class-ranked log it model identified two distinct classes of anglers who exhibited differing preferences in regard to the importance of nonconsumptive aspects of Bluefin Tuna fishing (e.g., catch and release). Income and recent Bluefin Tuna targeting were the primary determinants of class membership, and higher-income anglers who had targeted Bluefin Tuna in the past 5 years were significantly more likely to be in the class that derives substantive benefits from nonconsumptive angling activities. An annual consumer surplus exceeding US$14 million was estimated for the 2015 fishery. We considered potential angler welfare impacts of possible management changes (compensating surplus) and identified a large amount of latent effort currently present in the fishery in the form of consumptive-oriented anglers. As a result, liberalization of harvest regulations could potentially lead to a large influx of effort into the fishery, which could impede the ability of managers to maintain harvest levels within prescribed limits

    Antenna Study for the National Oceanic Satellite System (NOSS)

    Get PDF
    Three concepts capable of meeting most of the goals in the designing of the antenna are described. One concept utilizes a subreflector, as in an offset cassegrain. The subreflector is a quasi-optical diplexer so that one or two single frequency horns of desired illumination angle radiate through while four or more frequencies from an SMMR type horn are reflected from it. With this design, performance objectives are obtained. The third concept utilizes a separate feed and one meter reflector for the higher frequencies. An SMMR type multifrequency horn is used as a prime feed for the main reflector. This offers better beam efficiency and options for additional frequencies

    Critical issues in ionospheric data quality and implications for scientific studies

    Get PDF
    Ionospheric data are valuable records of the behavior of the ionosphere, solar activity, and the entire Sun-Earth system. The data are critical for both societally important services and scientific investigations of upper atmospheric variability. This work investigates some of the difficulties and pitfalls in maintaining long-term records of geophysical measurements. This investigation focuses on the ionospheric parameters contained in the historical data sets within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Geophysical Data Center and Space Physics Interactive Data Resource databases. These archives include data from approximately 100 ionosonde stations worldwide, beginning in the early 1940s. Our study focuses on the quality and consistency of ionosonde data accessible via the primary Space Physics Interactive Data Resource node located within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Geophysical Data Center and the World Data Center for Solar-Terrestrial Physics located in Boulder, Colorado. We find that, although the Space Physics Interactive Data Resource archives contained an impressive amount of high-quality data, specific problems existed involving missing and noncontiguous data sets, long-term variations or changes in methodologies and analysis procedures used, and incomplete documentation. The important lessons learned from this investigation are that the data incorporated into an archive must have clear traceability back to the primary source, including scientific validation by the contributors, and that the historical records must have associated metadata that describe relevant nuances in the observations. Although this report only focuses on historical ionosonde data in National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration databases, we feel that these findings have general applicability to environmental scientists interested in using long-term geophysical data sets for climate and global change research.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Laboratory investigation of radiative transfer in cloud fields, A

    Get PDF
    April 1978.Includes bibliographical references (page 46).Sponsored by the Global Atmospheric Research Program, National Science Foundation, and the GATE Project Office, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ATM-77-15369.Sponsored by the Global Atmospheric Research Program, National Science Foundation, and the GATE Project Office, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration OCD-74-21678

    Wind profiler demonstration system

    Get PDF
    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has started procurement of a 30-station demonstration network of Doppler radar wind profilers to be deployed in the central United States by 1989. The purposes of this demonstration network are: (1) to assess the impact of a large wind profiler network on meteorological forecasting; (2) to test wind profiler hardware designed specifically for commercial production and widespread deployment; and (3) to provide wind data for research programs involving weather phenomena in the central United States
    corecore