Expanding seabed horizons: extending Seamap Australia tools and analytics for marine managers

Expanding seabed horizons: extending Seamap Australia tools and analytics for marine managers

Emma Flukes1, Peter Walsh1

1Institute For Marine And Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University Of Tasmania (UTAS), Hobart, Tasmania, Australia

Abstract

Background
Efficient and effective management Australia’s marine environment requires up-to-date and easily accessible information. Current challenges include determining where to best invest resources for data collection and processing to enhance our knowledge of seafloor habitats. Seamap Australia (https://seamapaustralia.org/map) – an innovative open-source software tool – addresses these challenges by providing access to integrated, summarised, near-real-time seafloor data.

Methods
Seamap Australia (Seamap) was initially developed as a national repository for seafloor habitat data. New developments have extended this functionality to include a map-based decision-support portal for diverse stakeholders. This tool integrates data collections from a multitude of sources and research disciplines, synthesising it into a unified, user-friendly format, while maintaining full data provenance and currency. The software was developed in consultation experts from the marine science community.

Results
Seamap has proven to be an invaluable asset for marine managers, offering a comprehensive overview of critical habitats and areas under environmental threat and facilitating identification of knowledge gaps for prioritisation of research investment. Seamap equips managers with an intuitive, transparent gateway to relevant research data that aligns with national standards and objectives for marine data stewardship.

Conclusion
Seamap exemplifies the transformative potential of open data in addressing complex environmental problems. By providing real-time, trusted, and repeatable information, it facilitates informed decision-making for the protection and management of Australia’s marine environment through the provision of novel analytics. This tool showcases how innovative software can make marine research accessible and understandable to all, opening up vast possibilities for enhancing management of the marine estate.

Biography

Emma trained as a marine ecologist specialising in community-scale processes. She delved into data science in 2014 with the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) and the ARDC, creating sustainable data infrastructure and democratising IMAS’s research data. Now, as IMAS’s Senior Research Data Analyst and Data Manager for the National Environmental Science Program Marine and Coastal Hub, she facilitates the translation of scientific knowledge into policy-making and public education. Passionate about the potential of research data, Emma collaborates closely with end-users to understand data needs, bridge knowledge gaps, and deliver transparent, repeatable, data-driven results.

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