Monday, May 6, 2013

Researchers calculate the global highways of invasive marine species


"Silent Invaders" Ballast Water 2013

From University of Bristol

Globalisation, with its ever increasing demand for cargo transport, has inadvertently opened the flood gates for a new, silent invasion.
New research has mapped the most detailed forecast to date for importing potentially harmful invasive species with the ballast water of cargo ships.

Scientists from the Universities of Bristol, UK, and Oldenburg, Germany, have examined ship traffic data and biological records to assess the risk of future invasions.
Their research is published in the latest issue of Ecology Letters.

Animals and plants can hitch a ride on cargo ships, hiding as stowaways in the ballast tanks or clinging to the ship’s hull. Upon arrival in a new port, alien species can then wreak havoc in formerly pristine waters.
These so-called invasive species can drive native species to extinction, modify whole ecosystems and impact human economy.

The risk of marine bio-invasion caused by global shipping around the world.
The brighter colour and thicker line indicates a higher bio-invasion risk
Image by Dr Michael Gastner

Some regions, such as the San Francisco Bay or Chesapeake Bay, have even reported several new exotic species per year.
The knock-on effects to fishermen, farmers, tourism and industry create billions of US dollars in damage every year.
Conservationists and ship engineers are now trying to prevent the next big invasion.
But without knowing when and where it may occur, their possibilities remain limited.

As part of the research project, funded by the Volkswagen Foundation, the team obtained detailed logs of nearly three million ship voyages in 2007 and 2008.
Depending on the particular route travelled by each ship, the researchers estimated the probability that a species survives the journey and establishes a population in subsequent ports of call.
Although this probability is tiny for any single voyage, the numbers quickly add up because modern cargo traffic volumes are enormous.

Professor Bernd Blasius from the University of Oldenburg and one of the researchers involved in the study, said: “Our model combines information such as shipping routes, ship sizes, temperatures and biogeography to come up with local forecasts of invasion probabilities.”

The final tally reveals the hotspots of bioinvasion. Large Asian ports such as Singapore and Hong Kong but also US ports like New York and Long Beach are among the sites of highest invasion probability.
These waterways are notoriously busy, but, traffic is not the only important factor.

The North Sea, for example, does not rank among the top endangered regions despite intense shipping.
Temperatures here are lower, making it more difficult for alien species to survive.
However, arrivals from the other side of the Atlantic pose a serious threat to the North Sea.
Most invaders are predicted to originate from the North American east coast.

Hanno Seebens from the University of Oldenburg said: “We also compared our model results to field data. And, indeed, most of the alien species actually do originate from there.”

As severe as the risk of future invasions may be, the study also contains a hopeful message.
If ship engineers could prevent at least some potential invaders from getting on board, the total invasion risk could be substantially mitigated.

By successfully removing a species from 25 per cent of the ballast tanks arriving at each port (eg with filters, chemicals or radiation), the overall invasion probability decreases by 56 per cent.
The reduction is so disproportionately large because the effect of ballast water treatment multiplies at successive stopovers.

World waterways network (2008)
Ship movements in the past few years are well documented,
but there are many unknowns about future trade routes.

Bioinvasion is, as the researchers admit, a complex process, and records of past invasions are far from comprehensive.
Facing these uncertainties, they simulated various different scenarios.
Interestingly, the key results are comparable for different models, predicting the same hotspots and global highways of bioinvasion.
The traffic on the main shipping routes plays the greatest role for the calculation.

Dr Michael Gastner, Lecturer in Engineering Mathematics at the University of Bristol, added: “Ship movements in the past few years are well documented, but there are many unknowns about future trade routes.”

For example, the future of the world economy remains uncertain, and Arctic passages may become navigable as a consequence of global warming.
Future simulations will also have to take into account which engineering solutions for ballast water treatment will eventually be adopted by port authorities.

Paper: The risk of marine bioinvasion caused by global shipping, Hanno Seebens, Michael T. Gastner, Bernd Blasius, Ecology Letters, published online 24 April 2013.

Links :
  • BBC :  Scientists map global routes of ship-borne invasive species

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Ships threaten Australia's Great Barrier Reef


pilots at work navigating bulkers through the waters of the Great Barrier Reef

UNESCO has released its latest report on the state of the Great Barrier Reef, and has once again raised concerns about excessive port development along the coast, and the state of water quality around the reef.

This Envisat image features one of the natural wonders of the world – the Great Barrier Reef in the Coral Sea off the east coast of Queensland, Australia.
Australian researchers have discovered that Envisat's Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) sensor can detect coral bleaching down to 10 m deep.
This means Envisat could potentially map coral bleaching on a global scale.
MERIS acquired this image on 18 May 2008, working in Full Resolution mode to yield a spatial resolution of 300 m.
>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

Links :
  • The Conversation : Without wetlands, what will protect the Great Barrier Reef?

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Suez canal transit in 30 seconds

from USS Kearsarge (US Navy)
The Suez Canal is a 104 Nm long artificial channel, 24 m (79ft) deep and 205 meters (673 ft) wide, connecting the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea.
Its narrow width limits traffic to one-way travel at any given time,
with only two points wide enough to allow passing.
The canal is the quickest sea route between Asia and Europe, 
saving an estimated 15 days of journey time on average
BA233 Admiralty chart (Qanat el Suways)
courtesy of Egyptian Navy (Hydrographic Department) & UKHO
>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<< 

A capesize bulk carrier approaches the Egyptian-Japanese Friendship Bridge, aka
Suez Canal Bridge.
Image by Aashay Baindur

Questions :
  • transit from North to South our from South to North ?
  • 60 s video but actually how long did it take her ? (around 16 hours ?)
Suez Canal traffic simulation
Note : waiting a version 2 of this video have an updating positional widget showing the position of the ship on the nautical chart and lat/lon coordinates

Links :

Friday, May 3, 2013

The amazing interactive maps that blend the past and present

David Rumsey's Historical Map Collection is made up of 120 high-resolution digital historical maps
 -stored in the GeoGarage- taken from his collection of over 170,000
Click on a location to get a summary of what the map shows.
You can then view a digital version of the original map by clicking Open Image.

From DailyMail

Over 120 historical maps from various locations around the world have been overlayed onto a current map of the globe

A fascinating collection of historical maps showcasing how some of biggest cities have changed since the 17th century, and how far map-making techniques have come, is now online. 
Maps of London in the 19th Century, trade routes through Africa from 1842, nautical charts of Cuba and how the globe looked in 1790 are just some of the incredibly detailed pieces in the collection.
Each individual map has been overlayed onto a current world map, so you can compare how much the area has developed.
This detailed map of San Francisco shows important buildings and public improvements as illustrations.
The map was made to celebrate the rebuilding of the city after the earthquake and fire of 1906.
This edition of the map was updated in 1915


Cultural features on the maps can be compared to what they look like now by using the slider bars to adjust transparency.
All the maps range from 1680 to 1930 and show scales and cartographic art.
Each one is georeferenced so that the old maps appear on exactly the correct spot on the current global map - rather than the general area.
The maps are taken from historical maps from the Google Maps collection stored in the GeoGarage platform, as well as the Google Earth Rumsey Historical Maps sites.
Rumsey has a collection of more than 170,000 maps, which he has been collecting for 30 years.
He began putting them online, in high resolution, in 1999 and ll the maps can be downloaded for personal use.


Technical notes : turning old maps digital
Rumsey turns the original historical maps into digital images by scanning them using a high-resolution camera.
The digital images are then georeferenced using a GIS program.
GIS programs takes points on the old maps such as cities, coast lines, rivers and streets and connects them to the same points on a modern satellite map.
Up to 200 accuracy points can be taken for larger maps.
The GIS program then uses these points to recreate the digital image so it will fit into its modern geographical space.
Because many locations have changed in size and shape the images sometimes have to be curved to achieve this.

Impressionists on the Water reveals artists' nautical tendencies


From ArtFixDaily

Did you know that 85% of Impressionists had sailor, yachtsman or boat designer on their résumé? This nautical background, not often explored, inspired the many water scenes celebrated in a new book and related exhibition.

The new publication IMPRESSIONISTS ON THE WATER, coinciding with a major exhibition at the Legion of Honor organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, traces the history of light-infused water scenes within the social context of the latter nineteenth century.

Claude Monet, Boats moored at Le Petit-Gennevilliers (1874)

Water, boats, and all things nautical provided natural fodder for Impressionists, many of whom were sailors and yachtsman themselves—Pissarro had sailed the Atlantic several times, Bazille was as much a champion rower as a painter, though Manet, unfortunately failed twice in his goal to become a naval officer.

Caillebotte 'Régates à Argenteuil' (1893)

This catalogue reveals intriguing details behind key paintings from this period and includes a chronology of Gustave Caillebotte’s boating life, who was one of the movement’s forerunners and most proactive yachtsman.
Through essays by noted art historians, the book illuminates historical and cultural aspects of the nautical themes embraced by the Impressionists, including their connections to contemporary life such as the literature of Zola and Maupassant, leisure, and technology.

Claude Monet (Regattas at Argenteuil) 1872


IMPRESSIONISTS ON THE WATER is a collection of works focused on rowing, yachting, and sailing, on rivers and on sea, while highlighting the boatyards, clubs, and many regattas frequented by the artists.
A brilliant synthesis of boating and aesthetics, this book will be cherished by coastal admirers, scholars, and connoisseurs of one of the most beloved periods in art history.

Edouard Manet, Boating (1874)

One of the contributors, Phillip Dennis Cate, former director of the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum in New Jersey, is a specialist in nineteenth-century French art.
Daniel Charles is a noted historian of innovation and technology, with a particular expertise in maritime history.
Christopher Lloyd, a specialist in the art of the Italian Renaissance, French Impressionism, and British painting, was a curator in the Department of Western Art at the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford University for twenty years before becoming Surveyor of the Queen’s Pictures from 1988–2005.

Impressionists on the Water, by Phillip Dennis Cate, Daniel Charles and Christopher Lloyd, will be released by Skira Rizzoli, in June 2013.

The exhibition opens at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Legion of Honor, San Francisco, California, from June 1-October 6, 2013, and travels to the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts, from November 9, 2013-February 9, 2014.