An aerial view of Palmyra Atoll, where animal tracking data now being studied by NASA’s Internet of Animals project was collected using wildlife tags by partners at The Nature Conservancy, the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and several universities. The Nature Conservancy/Kydd Pollock
Anchoring the boat in a sandbar, research scientist Morgan Gilmour steps
into the shallows and is immediately surrounded by sharks. The warm waters
around the tropical island act as a reef shark nursery, and these baby biters
are curious about the newcomer. They zoom close and veer away at the last
minute, as Gilmour slowly makes her way toward the kaleidoscope of green
sprouting from the island ahead.
Gilmour, a scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley, conducts marine ecology and conservation studies using data collected by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) from animals equipped with wildlife tags. Palmyra Atoll, a United States marine protected area, provides the perfect venue for this work.
A juvenile blacktip reef shark swims toward researchers in the shallow waters around Palmyra Atoll. The Nature Conservancy/Kydd Pollock
A collection of roughly 50 small islands in the tropical heart of the
Pacific Ocean, the atoll is bursting with life of all kinds, from the reef
sharks and manta rays circling the shoreline to the coconut crabs climbing palm
branches and the thousands of seabirds swooping overhead. By analyzing the
movements of dolphins, tuna, and other creatures, Gilmour and her collaborators
can help assess whether the boundaries of the marine protected area surrounding
the atoll actually protect the species they intend to, or if its limits need to
shift.
Launched in 2020 by The Nature
Conservancy and its partners – USGS, NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration), and several universities – the project team deployed wildlife tags at Palmyra in 2022, when Gilmour was a
scientist with USGS.
Now with NASA, she is leveraging
the data for a study under the agency’s Internet of Animals project. By
combining information transmitted from wildlife tags with information about the
planet collected by satellites – such as NASA’s Aqua, NOAA’s GOES (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite) satellites, and
the U.S.-European Jason-3 – scientists can work with partners to draw conclusions that inform
ecological management.
The Palmyra Atoll is a haven for biodiversity, boasting thriving coral reef systems, shallow waters that act as a shark nursery, and rich vegetation for various land animals and seabirds. In the Landsat image above, a small white square marks the research station, where scientists from all over the world come to study the many species that call the atoll home. NASA/Earth Observatory Team
“Internet of Animals is more than just an individual collection of
movements or individual studies; it’s a way to understand the Earth at large,”
said Ryan Pavlick, then Internet of Animals project scientist at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, during the project’s kickoff
event.
The Internet of Animals at Palmyra
“Our work at Palmyra was remarkably
comprehensive,” said Gilmour. “We tracked the movements of eight species at
once, plus their environmental conditions, and we integrated climate
projections to understand how their habitat may change. Where studies may
typically track two or three types of birds, we added fish and marine mammals,
plus air and water column data, for a 3D picture of the marine protected area.”
Tagged Yellowfin Tuna, Grey Reef Sharks, and Great Frigatebirds move in and out of a marine protected area (blue square), which surrounds the Palmyra Atoll (blue circle) in the tropical heart of the Pacific. These species are three of many that rely on the atoll and its surrounding reefs for food and for nesting. NASA/Lauren Dauphin
Now, the NASA team has put that data into a species distribution model,
which combines the wildlife tracking information with environmental data from
satellites, including sea surface temperature, chlorophyll concentration, and
ocean current speed. The model can help researchers understand how animal
populations use their habitats and how that might shift as the climate changes.
Preliminary results from Internet
of Animals team show that the animals tracked are moving beyond the confines of
the Palmyra marine protected area. The model identified suitable habitats both
in and around the protected zone – now and under predicted climate change
scenarios – other researchers and decisionmakers can utilize that knowledge to
inform marine policy and conservation.
Research scientist Morgan Gilmour checks on a young great frigatebird in its nest. The marine protected area around Palmyra Atoll protects these birds’ breeding grounds. UC Santa Barbara/Devyn Orr
Following a 2023 presidential memorandum, NOAA began studying and gathering input on whether to expand the
protected areas around Palmyra and other parts of the Pacific Remote Islands
Marine National Monument. Analysis from NASA’s Internet of Animals could inform
that and similar decisions, such as whether to create protected “corridors” in
the ocean to allow for seasonal migrations of wildlife. The findings and models
from the team’s habitat analysis at Palmyra also could help inform conservation
at similar latitudes across the planet.
Beyond the Sea: Other Internet of Animals Studies
Research at Palmyra Atoll is just
one example of work by Internet of Animals scientists.
Claire Teitelbaum, a researcher
with the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute based at NASA Ames, studies
avian flu in wild waterfowl, investigating how their movement may contribute to
transmission of the virus to poultry and other domestic livestock.
Teams at Ames and JPL are also
working with USGS to create next-generation wildlife tags and sensors.
Low-power radar tags in development at JPL would be lightweight enough to track
small birds. Ames researchers plan to develop long-range radio tags capable of
maximizing coverage and transmission of data from high-flying birds. This could
help researchers take measurements in hard-to-reach layers of the atmosphere.
With the technology brought
together by the Internet of Animals, even wildlife can take an active role in
the study of Earth’s interacting systems, helping human experts learn more
about our planet and how best to confront the challenges facing the natural
world.
To learn more about the Internet of
Animals visit: https://www.nasa.gov/nasa-earth-exchange-nex/new-missions-support/internet-of-animals/
The Internet of Animals project is
funded by NASA and managed at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California. The team at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon
Valley is part of the NASA Earth Exchange, a Big Data initiative providing
unique insights into Earth’s systems using the agency’s supercomputers at the
center. Partners on the project include the U.S. Geological Survey, The Nature
Conservancy, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Yale
Center for Biodiversity and Global Change, Stanford University, University of
Hawaii, University of California Santa Barbara, San Jose State University,
University of Washington, and the Max Planck Institute for Animal Behavior.
For Researchers
- The research
collaboration’s dataset from Palmyra is available in open access: Palmyra Bluewater Research Marine Animal Telemetry Dataset,
2022-2023
- Related research from Morgan Gilmour’s team was published in the journal Global Ecology and Conservation in June 2022: “Evaluation of MPA designs that protect highly mobile megafauna now and under climate change scenarios.”
Source: Surfing NASA’s Internet of Animals: Satellites Study Ocean Wildlife - NASA
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