Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01.

The Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary (OCNMS) continues to invest significant resources into seafloor mapping activities along Washington’s outer coast (Intelmann and Cochrane 2006; Intelmann et al. 2006; Intelmann 2006). Results from these annual mapping efforts offer a snapshot of current ground conditions, help to guide research and management activities, and provide a baseline for assessing the impacts of various threatsto important habitat. During the months of August 2004 and May and July 2005, we used side scan sonar to image several regions of the sea floor in the northern OCNMS, and thedata were mosaicked at 1-meter pixel resolution. Video from a towed camera sled, bathymetry data, sedimentary samples and side scan sonar mapping were integrated to describe geological and biological aspects of habitat. Polygon features were created and attributed with a hierarchical deep-water marine benthic classification scheme (Greene etal. 1999). For three small areas that were mapped with both side scan sonar and multibeam echosounder, we made a comparison of output from the classified images indicating little difference in results between the two methods. With these considerations, backscatter derived from multibeam bathymetry is currently a costefficient and safe method for seabed imaging in the shallow (<30 meters) rocky waters ofOCNMS. The image quality is sufficient for classification purposes, the associated depths provide further descriptive value and risks to gear are minimized. In shallow waters (<30 meters) which do not have a high incidence of dangerous rock pinnacles, a towed multi-beam side scan sonar could provide a better option for obtaining seafloorimagery due to the high rate of acquisition speed and high image quality, however the high probability of losing or damaging such a costly system when deployed as a towedconfiguration in the extremely rugose nearshore zones within OCNMS is a financially risky proposition. The development of newer technologies such as intereferometricmultibeam systems and bathymetric side scan systems could also provide great potential for mapping these nearshore rocky areas as they allow for high speed data acquisition,produce precisely geo-referenced side scan imagery to bathymetry, and do not experience the angular depth dependency associated with multibeam echosounders allowing larger range scales to be used in shallower water. As such, further investigation of these systems is needed to assess their efficiency and utility in these environments compared to traditional side scan sonar and multibeam bathymetry. (PDF contains 43 pages.)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Intelmann, Steven S., Cochrane, Guy R.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: NOAA/National Ocean Service/National Marine Sanctuary Program 2006
Subjects:Management, Ecology, Environment, Benthic, Habitat mapping, Sediment classification, Side scan sonar, Multibeam echosounder, Textural analysis, Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, Essential fish habitat, Groundtruthing,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20121
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-201212021-07-13T02:04:13Z Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01. Intelmann, Steven S. Cochrane, Guy R. Management Ecology Environment Benthic Habitat mapping Sediment classification Side scan sonar Multibeam echosounder Textural analysis Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Essential fish habitat Groundtruthing The Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary (OCNMS) continues to invest significant resources into seafloor mapping activities along Washington’s outer coast (Intelmann and Cochrane 2006; Intelmann et al. 2006; Intelmann 2006). Results from these annual mapping efforts offer a snapshot of current ground conditions, help to guide research and management activities, and provide a baseline for assessing the impacts of various threatsto important habitat. During the months of August 2004 and May and July 2005, we used side scan sonar to image several regions of the sea floor in the northern OCNMS, and thedata were mosaicked at 1-meter pixel resolution. Video from a towed camera sled, bathymetry data, sedimentary samples and side scan sonar mapping were integrated to describe geological and biological aspects of habitat. Polygon features were created and attributed with a hierarchical deep-water marine benthic classification scheme (Greene etal. 1999). For three small areas that were mapped with both side scan sonar and multibeam echosounder, we made a comparison of output from the classified images indicating little difference in results between the two methods. With these considerations, backscatter derived from multibeam bathymetry is currently a costefficient and safe method for seabed imaging in the shallow (<30 meters) rocky waters ofOCNMS. The image quality is sufficient for classification purposes, the associated depths provide further descriptive value and risks to gear are minimized. In shallow waters (<30 meters) which do not have a high incidence of dangerous rock pinnacles, a towed multi-beam side scan sonar could provide a better option for obtaining seafloorimagery due to the high rate of acquisition speed and high image quality, however the high probability of losing or damaging such a costly system when deployed as a towedconfiguration in the extremely rugose nearshore zones within OCNMS is a financially risky proposition. The development of newer technologies such as intereferometricmultibeam systems and bathymetric side scan systems could also provide great potential for mapping these nearshore rocky areas as they allow for high speed data acquisition,produce precisely geo-referenced side scan imagery to bathymetry, and do not experience the angular depth dependency associated with multibeam echosounders allowing larger range scales to be used in shallower water. As such, further investigation of these systems is needed to assess their efficiency and utility in these environments compared to traditional side scan sonar and multibeam bathymetry. (PDF contains 43 pages.) 2021-06-24T15:18:43Z 2021-06-24T15:18:43Z 2006 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20121 en Marine Sanctuaries Conservation Series http://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/science/conservation/pdfs/Intelmann4_final2.pdf application/pdf application/pdf NOAA/National Ocean Service/National Marine Sanctuary Program Silver Spring, MD http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/2317 403 2011-09-29 19:17:05 2317 United States National Ocean Service
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Management
Ecology
Environment
Benthic
Habitat mapping
Sediment classification
Side scan sonar
Multibeam echosounder
Textural analysis
Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary
Essential fish habitat
Groundtruthing
Management
Ecology
Environment
Benthic
Habitat mapping
Sediment classification
Side scan sonar
Multibeam echosounder
Textural analysis
Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary
Essential fish habitat
Groundtruthing
spellingShingle Management
Ecology
Environment
Benthic
Habitat mapping
Sediment classification
Side scan sonar
Multibeam echosounder
Textural analysis
Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary
Essential fish habitat
Groundtruthing
Management
Ecology
Environment
Benthic
Habitat mapping
Sediment classification
Side scan sonar
Multibeam echosounder
Textural analysis
Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary
Essential fish habitat
Groundtruthing
Intelmann, Steven S.
Cochrane, Guy R.
Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01.
description The Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary (OCNMS) continues to invest significant resources into seafloor mapping activities along Washington’s outer coast (Intelmann and Cochrane 2006; Intelmann et al. 2006; Intelmann 2006). Results from these annual mapping efforts offer a snapshot of current ground conditions, help to guide research and management activities, and provide a baseline for assessing the impacts of various threatsto important habitat. During the months of August 2004 and May and July 2005, we used side scan sonar to image several regions of the sea floor in the northern OCNMS, and thedata were mosaicked at 1-meter pixel resolution. Video from a towed camera sled, bathymetry data, sedimentary samples and side scan sonar mapping were integrated to describe geological and biological aspects of habitat. Polygon features were created and attributed with a hierarchical deep-water marine benthic classification scheme (Greene etal. 1999). For three small areas that were mapped with both side scan sonar and multibeam echosounder, we made a comparison of output from the classified images indicating little difference in results between the two methods. With these considerations, backscatter derived from multibeam bathymetry is currently a costefficient and safe method for seabed imaging in the shallow (<30 meters) rocky waters ofOCNMS. The image quality is sufficient for classification purposes, the associated depths provide further descriptive value and risks to gear are minimized. In shallow waters (<30 meters) which do not have a high incidence of dangerous rock pinnacles, a towed multi-beam side scan sonar could provide a better option for obtaining seafloorimagery due to the high rate of acquisition speed and high image quality, however the high probability of losing or damaging such a costly system when deployed as a towedconfiguration in the extremely rugose nearshore zones within OCNMS is a financially risky proposition. The development of newer technologies such as intereferometricmultibeam systems and bathymetric side scan systems could also provide great potential for mapping these nearshore rocky areas as they allow for high speed data acquisition,produce precisely geo-referenced side scan imagery to bathymetry, and do not experience the angular depth dependency associated with multibeam echosounders allowing larger range scales to be used in shallower water. As such, further investigation of these systems is needed to assess their efficiency and utility in these environments compared to traditional side scan sonar and multibeam bathymetry. (PDF contains 43 pages.)
format monograph
topic_facet Management
Ecology
Environment
Benthic
Habitat mapping
Sediment classification
Side scan sonar
Multibeam echosounder
Textural analysis
Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary
Essential fish habitat
Groundtruthing
author Intelmann, Steven S.
Cochrane, Guy R.
author_facet Intelmann, Steven S.
Cochrane, Guy R.
author_sort Intelmann, Steven S.
title Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01.
title_short Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01.
title_full Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01.
title_fullStr Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01.
title_full_unstemmed Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Habitat Mapping: Survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys HMPR-114-2004-02 and HMPR-116-2005-01.
title_sort olympic coast national marine sanctuary habitat mapping: survey report and classification of side scan sonar data from surveys hmpr-114-2004-02 and hmpr-116-2005-01.
publisher NOAA/National Ocean Service/National Marine Sanctuary Program
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20121
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