Great Lakes Fishery Commission’s Technoscience Webinar: Real-time observing systems
February 13 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm
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Thursday, February 13th, 2:00-3:00pm EST: Real-time observing systems
Register: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMucu-oqDMtGdC8ph4Qf5AT6i_cVAaYwdQE
Speakers:
- Dr. Shelby Brunner, Dr. Jennifer Boehme, Great Lakes Observing System. “GLOS: A nexus of real-time information for multinational users”
- Observations are essential to understanding the current state of the ecosystem, enabling direct measurements, future comparisons, and inclusion in models for validation purposes. Significant advances in real-time observation technologies and their applications have been made over the last 5 to 10 years, and GLOS has played a key role in the expansion of the Great Lakes observation system enterprise. The Great Lakes Observing System (GLOS) offers centralized access to real-time observations in and around the Great Lakes, serving diverse user needs and connecting Great Lakes communities and ecosystems. GLOS’ data platform, Seagull, was launched in 2022 and specifically designed to prioritize the end user experience. We will highlight the existing real-time observing network and the data sharing platform supported by GLOS along with future plans related to ecosystem and fisheries management to support a resilient Great Lakes.
- Dr. Aaron Fisk, Katelynn Johnson, Rylie Robinson, Todd Leadley and Lydia Paulic, Realtime Aquatic Ecosystem Observation Network (RAEON), University of Windsor. “Simultaneous detection of fish and collection of environmental data in the Great Lakes”
- The Great Lakes Acoustic Telemetry Observation System (GLATOS) has revolutionized our understanding of fish movement and behaviour in the Great Lakes. As GLATOS expands to all corners of the world’s largest freshwater ecosystem and to fish species large and small, there is the opportunity to understand how environmental conditions influence fish ecology that will ultimately improve fish management and conservation. Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) and novel buoys now provide simultaneous measurement of environmental data and acoustically tagged fish in the Great Lakes. This seminar will highlight recent research in Lakes Huron, Erie and Ontario that demonstrate the potential of AUVs and buoys to quantify environmental conditions associated with fish detections and better identify the drivers of fish movement in the Great Lakes.
- Dr. Shelby Brunner, Dr. Jennifer Boehme, Great Lakes Observing System. “GLOS: A nexus of real-time information for multinational users”