Remote Sensing (Nov 2014)

Reef-Scale Thermal Stress Monitoring of Coral Ecosystems: New 5-km Global Products from NOAA Coral Reef Watch

  • Gang Liu,
  • Scott F. Heron,
  • C. Mark Eakin,
  • Frank E. Muller-Karger,
  • Maria Vega-Rodriguez,
  • Liane S. Guild,
  • Jacqueline L. De La Cour,
  • Erick F. Geiger,
  • William J. Skirving,
  • Timothy F. R. Burgess,
  • Alan E. Strong,
  • Andy Harris,
  • Eileen Maturi,
  • Alexander Ignatov,
  • John Sapper,
  • Jianke Li,
  • Susan Lynds

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs61111579
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 11
pp. 11579 – 11606

Abstract

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The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Coral Reef Watch (CRW) program has developed a daily global 5-km product suite based on satellite observations to monitor thermal stress on coral reefs. These products fulfill requests from coral reef managers and researchers for higher resolution products by taking advantage of new satellites, sensors and algorithms. Improvements of the 5-km products over CRW’s heritage global 50-km products are derived from: (1) the higher resolution and greater data density of NOAA’s next-generation operational daily global 5-km geo-polar blended sea surface temperature (SST) analysis; and (2) implementation of a new SST climatology derived from the Pathfinder SST climate data record. The new products increase near-shore coverage and now allow direct monitoring of 95% of coral reefs and significantly reduce data gaps caused by cloud cover. The 5-km product suite includes SST Anomaly, Coral Bleaching HotSpots, Degree Heating Weeks and Bleaching Alert Area, matching existing CRW products. When compared with the 50-km products and in situ bleaching observations for 2013–2014, the 5-km products identified known thermal stress events and matched bleaching observations. These near reef-scale products significantly advance the ability of coral reef researchers and managers to monitor coral thermal stress in near-real-time.

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