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Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System Presentation to the TERN Symposium 29 th March, 2011
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Page 1: IMOS

Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System

Presentation to the TERN Symposium29th March, 2011

Page 2: IMOS

Presentation Outline

1. Status of current investments

2. Research infrastructure available

3. Uptake and use of the data streams (infrastructure)

4. Potential for collaboration with TERN

– N.B. IMOS perspective

Page 3: IMOS

Status of current investments

• IMOS established 2007

• Ramp-up phase 2007-9

• NCRIS investment peaked in 2009-10

• 2009 EIF investment, to enhance and extend– stable at ~$45M pa

• >50% co-investment– Institutional partners

– Other partners • mainly Aust. Government

– State Governments 2006

/07

2007

/08

2008

/09

2009

/10

2010

/11

2011

/12

2012

/13

0

5,000,000

10,000,000

15,000,000

20,000,000

25,000,000

30,000,000

35,000,000

40,000,000

45,000,000

50,000,000

$52M

We are here

$50M

Page 4: IMOS

Research infrastructure available

• National-scale, in-situ, ocean observing system

• Integrated (IMOS)– open-ocean to coastal

– physics, chemistry and biology

• Data-centric – all data discoverable, accessible and used by the science community – and others

Page 5: IMOS

Research infrastructure available - 10 platform-based national Facilities

• Argo Floats

• Ships of Opportunity

• Deepwater Moorings

• Ocean Gliders

• Autonomous Underwater Vehicles

• National Mooring Network

• Ocean Radar

• Animal Tagging and Monitoring

• Wireless Sensor Networks

• Satellite Remote Sensing

Page 6: IMOS

Research infrastructure available

• Led by UTAS on behalf of the marine and climate science community– National Office and eMII

• Major institutions around the nation own and operate components of the system– institutional strengths/expertise,

available to all the community

• All make the data available to the whole community– condition of contract

UNSWU Sydney

MacquarieUTS

Page 7: IMOS

Research infrastructure available“...the recognition of data and information as infrastructure, is central for some capabilities” – NCRIS Evaluation Report

Page 8: IMOS

Through the Ocean Portal, eMII provides ...

• information about deployments• ISO-standard metadata

• access to the actual data• plots, visualisations etc• interoperability

Page 9: IMOS

Through the Ocean Portal, eMII provides ...

• information about deployments• ISO-standard metadata

• access to the actual data• plots, visualisations etc• interoperability

Page 10: IMOS

Through the Ocean Portal, eMII provides ...

• information about deployments• ISO-standard metadata

• access to the actual data• plots, visualisations etc• interoperability

Page 11: IMOS

Through the Ocean Portal, eMII provides ...

• information about deployments• ISO-standard metadata

• access to the actual data• plots, visualisations etc• interoperability

Page 12: IMOS

Through the Ocean Portal, eMII provides ...

• information about deployments• ISO-standard metadata

• access to the actual data• plots, visualisations etc• interoperability

Page 13: IMOS

Research infrastructure available - IMOS benefiting from and contributing to national e-Research infrastructure

ANDS

TERNAUSCOPE

ALA

Page 14: IMOS

Uptake and use of the data streams

• Marine and climate science

• Bluewater and coastal science

• Physics, chemistry and biology (ecosystem)

• In-situ observing and vessel-based observing and remote sensing

• Observations and modelling– Validation and model development

– Data assimilation

– Observing system design

• And very significant international collaboration

• It’s a broad church...

Page 15: IMOS

Uptake and use of the data streams

• Decisions about what to observe, and where, are driven by Science Plans addressing five major research themes

– Multi-decadal Ocean Change

– Climate Variability and Weather Extremes

– Major Boundary Currents and Inter-basin Flows

– Continental Shelf Processes

– Ecosystem Responses

Page 16: IMOS

UTAS/TAFICSIROAADACE CRC(IMAS)

UNSWU SydneyMacquarieUTS(SIMS)DECCWNSW I&IDSTO

CSIROUQGriffithQ DERMQ DEEDI(Ecosciences Precinct)

AIMSJCU(TMN)(AIMS@JCU)

AIMSCDUANUNT Govt(ATRF)

UWAAIMSCSIROCurtinMurdochEdith CowanWA DECWA FisheriesWA DoT(WAMSI)(IOMRC)

SARDIFlindersU AdelaideSA ENRPIRSA(MISA)

CSIROGAANUABARES

BOMCSIRO(CAWCR)U MelbourneDeakinMAFRIVic EPA

Major centres of marine and climate science capability in Australia KEY

• Institutions involved in leading IMOS shown in bold

• Cross-institutional initiatives shown in (brackets)

Page 17: IMOS

Uptake and use of the data streams

• IMOS investments are guided by community-driven science and implementation plans (Node plans)

• They have all been internationally peer-reviewed

• And have evolved into an IMOS national science plan, with regional Node ‘chapters’

Page 18: IMOS

Potential for collaboration with TERN- National, Regional, Functional

• National– Coastal Zone, a ‘shared space’

• Marine, Terrestrial, Freshwater, Geophysical, Atmospheric

– Environmental information• National leadership in changing the culture

• Regional– Making integration real

• Focus of IMOS, Focus of TERN, integrated modelling...

• Functional– Satellite Remote Sensing

– Information Management

Page 19: IMOS

Integrated Marine Observing System University of Tasmania

Private Bag 110 Hobart Tasmania 7001

http://www.imos.org.au

Thank you, and thanks to...

• Facility/Sub-Facility Leaders and Staff

• Node Leadership teams and Node members

• Operator Institutions

• Advisory Board

• Partners – co-investors, users

• others in the Australian marine

and climate science community