加强西非卫星海洋学驱动的研究:一个服务不足地区能力发展的案例研究。

Remote sensing in earth systems sciences Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-07-07 DOI:10.1007/s41976-021-00051-4
Ebenezer S Nyadjro, Brian K Arbic, Christian E Buckingham, Paige E Martin, Edem Mahu, Joseph K Ansong, Johnson Adjetey, Elvis Nyarko, Kwasi Appeaning Addo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

海洋商业和资源在西非沿海国家的经济和生活方式中发挥着重要作用。这些国家从海洋资源中获得了巨大的利润,同时也面临着与海洋接壤的挑战。尽管如此,关于西非沿海国家与海洋资源共存和可持续利用的最佳方式的研究有限,这主要是由于缺乏现场工作的基础设施,缺乏能力发展,以及开展海洋学研究的综合数据集。加纳沿海海洋环境暑期学校(COESSING;www.coessing.org)是为了帮助应对这些挑战而开发的。自2015年以来,每年夏天,来自美国和欧洲的海洋科学家(如生物学家、化学家、物理学家、水文学家)与西非同事合作,在加纳阿克拉领导为期一周的强化暑期学校,地点在区域海事大学和加纳大学之间交替。该学院接收了来自大学、政府机构和私营部门组织的100多名学员,主要来自加纳及其邻国利比里亚、尼日利亚、多哥和贝宁等国。学校的形式包括上午讲课,下午实地考察,动手实验练习和对学生的一对一指导。COESSING项目的重要组成部分是卫星海洋学,它向参与者介绍了广泛的、通常是免费的遥感海洋数据集。参与者将培养获取、处理和分析这些数据集的技能,以便更好地了解区域海洋现象,如上升流、污染、栖息地特征、海平面上升和海岸侵蚀。随着学校的发展,辅导员与项目参与者保持联系,帮助他们获取和分析研究、论文和研究生申请等方面的数据。总之,像COESSING这样的学校不仅对该地区的科学至关重要,而且对全球海洋界也至关重要,因为这种培训培养了渴望、聪明的头脑,同时在样本严重不足的海洋中改进了区域观测和建模策略。这里,我们描述了一个独特的案例,在这个案例中,卫星海洋学为西非几内亚湾沿岸的国家带来了这样的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Enhancing Satellite Oceanography-Driven Research in West Africa: a Case Study of Capacity Development in an Underserved Region.

Marine business and resources play a major role in the economics and way of life in coastal West African countries. Such countries see great profitability from their marine resources while also facing challenges that come with a bordering sea. Despite this fact, there has been limited research into the optimal way for West African Coastal States to coexist with, and sustainably use their marine resources, a research deficit that is mainly due to a lack of infrastructure for in-situ work, lack of capacity development, and comprehensive datasets to undertake oceanographic research. The Coastal Ocean Environment Summer School in Ghana (COESSING; www.coessing.org) was developed to help meet some of these challenges. Each summer since 2015, ocean scientists (e.g., biologists, chemists, physicists, hydrologists) from the USA and Europe have collaborated with West African colleagues to lead a week-long intensive summer school in Accra, Ghana, alternating in location between the Regional Maritime University and the University of Ghana. The school receives in excess of 100 participants drawn from universities, government agencies, and the private sector organizations, mainly from Ghana and neighboring Liberia, Nigeria, Togo, and Benin, among others. The format of the school includes morning lectures, afternoon field trips, and hands-on laboratory exercises and one-on-one coaching of students. Important to the COESSING program is the satellite oceanography component which introduces participants to the extensive and often free, remotely sensed oceanographic datasets. Participants develop skills that allow them to access, process, and analyze these datasets in order to better understand regional oceanographic phenomena, such as upwelling, pollution, habitat characterization, sea level rise, and coastal erosion. Following the school, facilitators keep in touch with program participants, helping them acquire and analyze data for their studies, dissertations, and often graduate school applications, etc. In summary, schools such as COESSING are critical not only for science in the region but for the global ocean community as such training develops eager, bright minds while leading to improved regional observing and modeling strategies in severely under-sampled seas. Here, we describe a unique case in which satellite oceanography has led to such outcomes for countries bordering the Gulf of Guinea, West Africa.

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