FeedbackAboutHelpLogin
Department of Commerce National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Department of Commerce
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
CoRIS Site Home Search BrowseSearch Tips
CoRIS Banner

.

Designating Spatial Priorities for Marine Biodiversity Conservation in the Coral Triangle


Description:

Title:
Designating Spatial Priorities for Marine Biodiversity Conservation in the Coral Triangle
Author(s):
Asaad, Irawan
Lundquist, Carolyn J.
Erdmann, Mark V.
Van Hooidonk, Ruben
Costello, Mark J.
Dates of Publication:
2018
Abstract:
Surface drifting buoys, or drifters, are used in oceanographic and climate research, oil spill tracking, weather forecasting, search and rescue operations, calibration and validation of velocities from high-frequency radar and from altimeters, iceberg tracking, and support of offshore drilling operations. In this review, we present a brief history of drifters, from the message in a bottle to the latest satellite-tracked, multisensor drifters. We discuss the different types of drifters currently used for research and operations as well as drifter designs in development. We conclude with a discussion of the various properties that can be observed with drifters, with heavy emphasis on a critical process that cannot adequately be observed by any other instrument: dispersion in the upper ocean, driven by turbulence at scales from waves through the submesoscale to the large-scale geostrophic eddies.
Local Corporate Name:
OAR (Oceanic and Atmospheric Research)
AOML (Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory)
CIMAS (Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies)
Type of Resource:
Journal Article
Note:
Surface drifting buoys, or drifters, are used in oceanographic and climate research, oil spill tracking, weather forecasting, search and rescue operations, calibration and validation of velocities from high-frequency radar and from altimeters, iceberg tracking, and support of offshore drilling operations. In this review, we present a brief history of drifters, from the message in a bottle to the latest satellite-tracked, multisensor drifters. We discuss the different types of drifters currently used for research and operations as well as drifter designs in development. We conclude with a discussion of the various properties that can be observed with drifters, with heavy emphasis on a critical process that cannot adequately be observed by any other instrument: dispersion in the upper ocean, driven by turbulence at scales from waves through the submesoscale to the large-scale geostrophic eddies.
URL:
DOI:
Back to Top
/search/rest/document?f=html&id=%7B1EBB1BE0-851C-487C-A299-473AE57FCF05%7D
This Geoportal was built using the Geoportal Server. Please read the Disclaimer and Privacy or Contact Us.