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Benefits of geographic information systems for state and regional ocean management : final report to the Coastal Services Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Charleston, South Carolina

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Benefits of geographic information systems for state and regional ocean management : final report to the Coastal Services Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Charleston, South Carolina
Names Sowers, Derek C. (creator)
Good, James W. (creator)
Coastal Services Center (U.S.) (creator)
Oregon State University. Sea Grant College Program (creator)
Oregon State University. Marine Resource Management Program (creator)
Date Issued 1999-10 (iso8601)
Note Master of Science (M.S.)
Abstract The current and potential benefits of using geographic information systems (GIS)
to support state-level and regional-scale ocean management in the United States are
evaluated. Specifically, the role of GIS in facilitating improved integration of
management strategies for a variety of resource use issues across multiple management
jurisdictions is examined, along with the potential of GIS to enhance the efficiency,
effectiveness, and equity of ocean management efforts. Barriers and limitations to the
development and use of ocean GIS are also analyzed. A background discussion of the
U.S. ocean management policy framework and the use of GIS in natural resource
management is included to provide the reader with appropriate context for the study. A
broad survey of relevant ocean management, GIS, and coastal resource agency
publications, along with nation-wide interviews of coastal managers and GIS
professionals, provide the basis of the evaluation. Information collected in the research
process is compiled into state-by-state profiles for 23 U.S. coastal states, with more in-depth
case studies presented for Florida, Maine, and a regional GIS initiative pertaining
to the states of North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.
The following are recognized as principal conclusions of the evaluation: state-level
interest and institutional capacity for ocean resource management are increasing,
state and federal management agencies often have different resource management
strategies and information requirements, state-level technical capacity to develop and use
GIS is substantial and constantly increasing, GIS provides recognizable current and
potential benefits to ocean management efforts, GIS fosters enhanced integration,
efficiency, effectiveness, and equity of ocean management efforts, and significant
financial, institutional, and technical limitations currently impede the development of
ocean GIS. In light of these conclusions, recommendations are offered to support state
and regional-level ocean GIS initiatives.
Genre Research Paper
Topic Marine geographic information systems
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/30134

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