Posts Tagged 'website'



Ocean acidification: issues brief

This is a Issue Brief on ocean acidification released by IUCN on November 2017.

IUCN is a membership Union composed of both government and civil society organisations. It harnesses the experience, resources and reach of its more than 1,400 Member organisations and the input of more than 17,000 experts. This diversity and vast expertise makes IUCN the global authority on the status of the natural world and the measures needed to safeguard it.

International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), 1 November 2017. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: document/pdf

Ocean literacy for all: a toolkit

The IOC-UNESCO Ocean Literacy for All A toolkit is the result of a joint work and contributions of members of this global partnership. It provides to educators and learners worldwide the innovative tools, methods, and resources to understand the complex ocean processes and functions and, as well, to alert them on the most urgent ocean issues. It also presents the essential scientific principles and information needed to understand the cause-effect relationship between individual and collective behavior and the impacts that threaten the ocean health.

IOC-UNESCO, 2018. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: document/pdf

Ocean Literacy Portal

The Ocean Literacy Portal serves as a one-stop shop, providing resources and content available to all, with the goal of creating an ocean-literate society able to make informed and responsible decisions on ocean resources and ocean sustainability. Here you will find the necessary Ocean Literacy resources to develop knowledge, skills, values and behaviours needed to create an ocean literate community. A collection of education and information resources, projects, tools, methods, reports, programs and materials regarding global ocean knowledge, useful to understand ocean processes, functions and issues.

IOC-UNESCO. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

Antarctica in the classroom

There is no “quick fix” for ocean acidification; knowledge of the effects of people’s carbon footprint is essential to help minimize the ongoing problem. In this unit, we’ll look at the remoteness of the Antarctic region and how it highlights how the effects of ocean acidification felt all around the world, including in unpopulated areas.

SAILDRONE, 1 March 2019. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: online course

Ocean chemistry

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution is the world’s leading, independent non-profit organization dedicated to ocean research, exploration, and education. Our scientists and engineers push the boundaries of knowledge about the ocean to reveal its impacts on our planet and our lives.

Here you will find information about topics on ocean chemistry, including ocean acidification, biogeochemistry and carbon cycle.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Resource.

Mid Atlantic Coastal Acidification Network

The Mid-Atlantic Coastal Acidification Network

The Mid-Atlantic Coastal Acidification Network (MACAN) is a nexus of scientists, tribal, federal, and state agency representatives, resource managers, and affected industry partners who seek to coordinate and guide regional observing, research, and modeling of ocean and coastal acidification.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

MACAN-The Mid-Atlantic Coastal Acidification Network. Resource.

MACAN: resources

This page highlights selected informational resources on estuarine, coastal, and ocean acidification in the Mid-Atlantic.

The Mid-Atlantic Coastal Acidification Network (MACAN). Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

Ocean acidification: the evidence

Students watch a video to identify and describe the effects of ocean acidification in detail. Next, they examine a graphical representation of ocean acidification data, summarising the linear trends they see. Finally, students calculate the slope of these lines to quantitatively compare and contrast the strength and direction of these trends.

Near the end of an El Niño warming event, these coral reefs near the atolls of Kiribati have been killed by warmed water, and appear in unhealthy shades of red, brown, and white.
Dying Reef: Near the end of an El Niño warming event, these coral reefs near the atolls of Kiribati have been killed by warmed water, and appear in unhealthy shades of red, brown, and white.
Photograph by Danielle Claar/National Geographic

National Geographic. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: online course

Oceanic impacts

Students make and evaluate predictions related to increases in global ocean temperatures, sea level rise, and ocean acidification, using evidence from physical demonstrations. They then watch a video to identify the causes and consequences of climate change on the oceans.

National Geographic. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: online course

EurOcean database

EurOcean database facilities in Europe which are dedicated to marine sciences broad range of activities.

Objective To offer a comprehensive list of all existing facilities in Europe which are dedicated to marine sciences broad range of activities. It provides the first level of knowledge and characteristics for each facility, as well as the links and contact to access the further details provided by the operator.

For who this database is intended for all stakeholders – scientists, engineers, policy makers, private companies, universities – for their respective needs, either as user or as operator, or as designer, or as funder. How to use it search criteria plus an iterative map allow any targeted search of information for every type of request. For more information on how to use it please consult the Search Tips Area.

How to understand it the landscape of marine research infrastructure is complex, a choice of descriptors was done to provide as much as possible a clear and consistent vision, to provide all relevant information for this “discovery” level of the facilities. All explanations necessary to understand each descriptor are given in the Technical Notes.

How to update it this database took in consideration the most recent overviews available. However, the landscape is constantly evolving, new infrastructures appear, others have significant up-gradings, some became out of service, characteristics change,… The approach of a database continuously updated is a necessity and a procedure is proposed to allow all to contribute, see the functions Insert, update or Contact EurOcean.

EuOcean. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

Ocean acidification: educational resources

On this page you will find videos and articles on ocean acidification.

Ye Mystic Krewe of the Nautilus is a 501c3 organization dedicated to having fun while promoting philanthropy, environmental awareness and conservation of our beautiful Tampa Bay Area.

Its mission is to promote Florida environmental awareness and conservation through friendly partnerships, education, charity sponsorship and community service.

Nautilus. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

JPI Strategy

Developed with JPI Oceans members and co-created with stakeholders, the Strategy Framework launched online on Monday 29 March, provides a coherent setting for the coming years for efficient and impactful pan-European research and innovation, in support of healthy and productive seas and ocean.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

JPI Oceans, 1 March 2021. Resource.

MedSeA: outreach

Scientific evidence must be delivered in an understandable way to policymakers and other key stakeholders in Mediterranean countries and elsewhere. In the MedSeA project we are developing a Reference User Group (RUG) of key stakeholders from the Mediterranean countries (MRUG).

 The MRUG objectives are to:

  • Advise on the types of data and analyses and products that will be most useful to managers, policy advisers, decision makers, and politicians.
  • Advise on the format and nature of key messages arising from the research.
  • Advise on the dissemination procedures to ensure that the results from the research are disseminated to all potential end users.
  • Transmit key science developments into their own sector and parent organisation.

Mediterranean Sea Acidification (MedSeA). Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

BIOACID: resources

A selection of brochures related to ocean acidification:

  • Exploring ocean change
  • The other carbon dioxide problem
  • Summary for policymakers,
  • The EPOCA Reference User Group documents, etc.

Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification (BIOACID). Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

The science of climate change: questions and answers

This publication from the Australian Academy of Science aims to address confusion created by contradictory information in the public domain. It sets out to explain the current situation* in climate science, including where there is consensus in the scientific community and where uncertainties exist.

‘The science of climate change: questions and answers’ were prepared by a working group of nine members co-chaired by Dr Ian Allison FAA and Professor Mike Raupach FAA FTSE. The document was also reviewed by an oversight committee of eight members chaired by Professor John Zillman AO FAA FTSE. This publication is an update of the Academy’s 2010 booklet of the same name.

Australian Academy of Science, 1 February 2015. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: document/pdf

More than just temperature: climate change and ocean acidification

Chemists have long known that a beaker of water sitting in a lab will absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air and become more acidic. Could it happen at a larger scale if we greatly increased the concentration of CO2 in the world’s atmosphere, would some of it be absorbed by the world’s oceans? What would be the ecological effects? Over the next century or so, we are going to find out.

Australian Academy of Science, 1 May 2015. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA)

The European project on ocean acidification (EPOCA) was the first international research effort on ocean acidification. Launched in May 2008 with the overall goal to further our understanding of the biological, ecological, biogeochemical, and societal implications of ocean acidification, it comprised over 160 scientists from 32 institutions in 10 European countries. EPOCA was partly funded by the European Commission (EC, EUR 6.5 million for a total budget of EUR 16 million) and was launched in May 2008 for four years.

European Commission, CORDIS, 30 April 2012. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

Summary for policymakers

Ocean acidification research is growing rapidly. The Third Symposium on the Ocean in a High-CO2 World (Monterey, California, September 2012) convened 540 experts from 37 countries to discuss the results of research into ocean acidification, its impacts on ecosystems, socio-economic consequences and implications for policy. More than twice as many scientists participated in the Monterey symposium compared to the previous symposium four years earlier. Here we present a summary of the state of knowledge on ocean acidification based on the latest research presented at the symposium and beyond.

Resource type: website

Resource format: document/pdf

IGBP, IOC, SCOR, 4 July 1905. Resource.

Educational resources for the high school classroom

A selection of educational resources for the high school classroom:

  • presentations & videos
  • curricula & activities
  • interactive & multimedia
  • background materials

NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage

Coral reef educational resources

The Coral Reef Conservation Program is a partnership between the NOAA Line Offices that work on coral reef issues. We bring together expertise from across NOAA for a multidisciplinary approach to understanding and conserving coral reef ecosystems.

NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program. Resource.

Resource type: website

Resource format: webpage


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