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Harnessing the power of Google Earth for seagrass conservation in the Comoros Islands

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Harnessing the power of Google Earth for seagrass conservation in the Comoros Islands
Names Reifke, Lisa M. (creator)
Harte, Michael (advisor)
Date Issued 2010-04-07T22:55:53Z (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2010
Abstract Google Earth has given internet users the power of a virtual globe at their fingertips. It is
a free, easy to use tool that avoids the need for technical training, and uses a simple,
intuitive interface. For this reason, Google Earth appeals to general and more specialized
users. This project describes a case study of the use of Google Earth as a user-friendly
and cost-effective tool for the conservation of seagrass in the Comoros Islands. The case
study uses a baseline seagrass mapping study to help demonstrate the potential of Google
Earth to be used by management agencies, non-governmental organizations, scientists,
and the general public for marine conservation in developed and developing countries.
The final product is a Google Earth file which includes GIS map layers of the seagrass
coverage and distribution within the study area, 3-D graphs of the results, species
profiles, a series of educational placemarks that guide the user through the importance of
and threats to seagrass, and documentation of the methods used in the seagrass survey.
All of this information is contained within a single file that can be easily and freely
shared with anyone who has internet access. Specialized users such as management
agencies, non-governmental organizations, and scientists are likely to find
this tool most useful to visualize and communicate GIS data. For general users, the
Google Earth file will provide awareness of seagrass ecosystems and the opportunity to
explore data from a previously unstudied remote area, potentially narrowing the gap
between science and the public. The use of Google Earth opens endless possibilities for
easy data dissemination, collaboration, and education to a wide-audience across the
globe.
Genre Research Paper
Topic seagrass
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/15313

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