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E-raamat: Geoinformatics for Marine and Coastal Management [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (University College, Cork, Ireland), Edited by
  • Formaat: 414 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Dec-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781315181523
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 244,66 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 349,51 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 414 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Dec-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781315181523

Geoinformatics for Marine and Coastal Management provides a timely and valuable assessment of the current state of the art geoinformatics tools and methods for the management of marine systems. This book focuses on the cutting-edge coverage of a wide spectrum of activities and topics such as GIS-based application of drainage basin analysis, contribution of ontology to marine management, geoinformatics in relation to fisheries management, hydrography, indigenous knowledge systems, and marine law enforcement. The authors present a comprehensive overview of the field of Geoinformatic Applications in Marine Management covering key issues and debates with specific case studies illustrating real-world applications of the GIS technology. This "box of tools" serves as a long-term resource for coastal zone managers, professionals, practitioners, and students alike on the management of oceans and the coastal fringe, promoting the approach of allowing sustainable and integrated use of oceans to maximize opportunities while keeping risks and hazards to a minimum.

Foreword vii
Preface xiii
Editors xvii
Contributors xix
1 Geoinformatics for Applied Coastal and Marine Management
1(16)
Darius Bartlett
Louis Celliers
2 Mapping the Seabed
17(26)
Gill Scott
Xavier Monteys
David Hardy
Charise McKeon
Thomas Furey
3 A GIS-Based Application of Drainage Basin Analysis and Geomorphometry in the Submarine Environment: The Gollum Canyon System, Northeast Atlantic
43(30)
Paul K. Murphy
Andrew J. Wheeler
4 Recent Developments in Remote Sensing for Coastal and Marine Applications
73(24)
Melanie Luck-Vogel
5 Current and Future Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Trends in Coastal and Marine Management
97(32)
Dian Zhang
Noel E. O'Connor
Fiona Regan
6 Ontologies and Their Contribution to Marine and Coastal Geoinformatics Interoperability
129(20)
Yassine Lassoued
Adam Leadbetter
7 Applied Marine Management with Volunteered Geographic Information
149(26)
Grace Goldberg
Mimi D'Lorio
Will McClintock
8 Geoinformatic Applications in Marine Management
175(28)
Lauren McWhinnie
Kate Gormley
9 Navigating a Sea of Data: Geoinformatics for Law Enforcement at Sea
203(22)
Phillip Saunders
10 Geospatial Technologies and Indigenous Knowledge Systems
225(26)
Shankar Aswani
11 Spatial Information and Ecosystem-Based Management in the Marine Arctic
251(18)
Tom Barry
Tom Christensen
Soffia Gudmundsdottir
Kdri Fannar Larusson
Courtney Price
Anders Mosbech
12 Geospatial Technologies for Siting Coastal and Marine Renewable Infrastructures
269(28)
David R. Green
13 Geoinformatics for Fisheries Management
297(26)
Tom Nishida
Kiyoshi Itoh
Albert Caton
Darius Bartlett
14 Geoinformatics in Hydrography and Marine Navigation
323(26)
Adam Weintrit
15 The Use of Geoinformatics by the Irish Naval Service in Maritime Emergency and Security Response
349(18)
Brian Mathews
Cathal Power
16 Spatial Analysis for Coastal Vulnerability Assessment
367(30)
Jarbas Bonetti
Colin D. Woodroffe
Index 397
Darius Bartlett is an earth scientist and geomorphologist by training, has been teaching and researching at the interface between GIS and coastal zone science and management in the Department of Geography at the University College Cork in Ireland for over a quarter-century, and is a past director of the departments MSc in GIS and remote sensing and the MSc in applied coastal and marine management taught programs. As a corresponding member of the Commission on Coastal Systems of the International Geographical Union, he helped establish the CoastGIS Biennial Symposium Series, in partnership with Ron Furness (then at the Australian Hydrographic Office and chair of the International Cartographic Associations Commission on Coastal Mapping), and hosted the first meeting as a collaboration between the two organisations in Cork in 1995 (the 12th meeting in the series was held in Cape Town in April 2015). He is the co-editor of Marine and Coastal Geographical Information Systems (with Dawn Wright, Taylor & Francis, 2000) and GIS for Coastal Zone Management (with Jennifer Smith, CRC Press, 2005).

Louis Celliers is employed by the CSIR in a dual role as a principal researcher in, and heads up the Coastal Systems Research Group of the Natural Resources and the Environment Business Unit. He completed his graduate (BSc Agric) and postgraduate studies (MSc Agric) at the University of Pretoria in 1998, followed by his PhD in marine ecology at the University of Natal, South Africa in 2001. The responsibilities of his portfolio include the integration of coastal and marine science with management of the coastal area by the three spheres of government in South Africa. His research interests and profes- sional development strongly favour an approach that guides, integrates and translates good science to the benefit of society through the maintenance of natural systems. His main research interests, and focus of his published work, are in the area