ASPRS 2010 Annual Conference, San Diego, California, April 27, 2010
ASPRS Classified Session
REMINDER: ABSTRACT DEADLINE IS MARCH 12, 2010
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) will be hosting an all-day classified session in conjunction with the 2010 ASPRS Annual Conference. The purpose of the classified session is to engage the attendees in exploring views, ideas, approaches, and solutions for resolving the GEOINT Fusion Grand Challenge.
Call for Papers
NGA is soliciting research papers and presentations of twenty to thirty minutes. Papers should address the complexity of the problem and the need to integrate multidisciplinary approaches, multi-data and sensors, and multi-INT to improve our Nation’s ability to detect, locate, characterize, and track different entities.
** Please do not submit papers that focus on proprietary company or commercial products or services or use the presentations to promote or advertise a product, service, or company. **
Submission requirements:
Abstracts for papers must be received by March 12, 2010. Abstracts may be classified but must have an unclassified title and include the classification level, author(s)/presenter(s) with affiliations(s), and a description not to exceed 500 words. Abstracts will be evaluated on their descriptions and implications, relevance to session and community, and overall technical quality. Paper selection notifications will be made by March 22, 2010. If selected full presentation or paper will be due to NGA on or before April 9, 2010.
Download complete information on submitting an abstract.
Call for Deep-Dive Discussion Topics
NGA is soliciting topics for in-depth round table research discussions in the afternoon sessions that address key challenges and potential solutions on important GEOINT fusion problems. Selection of topics will be based on importance of the problem being addressed, creative problem formulations, state-of-the-art and practices elucidations, innovative ideas, ingenious approaches, and imaginative research alternatives.
The report, “Long-term reductions in anthropogenic nutrients link to improvements in Chesapeake Bay habitat is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1003590107. Images are available on the project website.
The Potomac River in Washington, D.C. is showing multiple benefits from restoration efforts, newly published research suggests. Reduced nutrients and improved water clarity have increased the abundance and diversity of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) in the Potomac, according to direct measurements taken during the 18-year field study.
Since 1990, the area covered by SAV in the lower Potomac has doubled, the area covered by native SAV has increased ten-fold, the diversity of plant species has increased, and the proportion of exotic species to native species has declined as nutrients have declined, according to the study by the U.S. Geological Survey and England’s National Oceanography Centre (NOC) in Southhampton, UK.
“Improvements to plant communities living at the bottom of the river have occurred nearly in lock step with decreases in nutrients and sediment in the water and incremental reductions in nitrogen effluent entering the river from the wastewater treatment plant for the Washington DC area,” said USGS scientist Dr. Nancy Rybicki.
More than a dozen species of SAV, including the exotic hydrilla, co-exist in this reach of the Potomac that was almost barren in a 1978-1981 USGS study.
“People want to know that money spent on ecosystem restoration is having tangible results, but many feel that efforts to clean up Chesapeake Bay have so far had limited success,” said researcher Dr Henry Ruhl of the NOC.
“Upgrades to the wastewater treatment plant have benefited SAV habitats 50-miles downstream. These findings underscore the benefits of nutrient reduction efforts on a major tributary to the Chesapeake Bay,” said Rybicki, who has been conducting research on the Potomac since 1979.
“Our results suggest that widespread recovery of submerged vegetation abundance and diversity can be achievable if restoration efforts are enhanced across the bay,” said Henry Ruhl of the National Oceanography Centre. “There are many other estuaries globally where nutrients have been identified as contributing to SAV habitat decline, so restoration is an issue for many governments.”
SAV are critical to the ecosystem in the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. They provide oxygen, food, and shelter so that invertebrates, fish, crabs and waterfowl can survive. High nutrient levels stimulate algal blooms in the water, decrease water clarity, and block light needed for SAV growth.
The authors analyzed measurements of aquatic plant species abundance, nutrient effluent from the wastewater treatment plant, and water quality from 1990 to 2007. The surveys included a 50-mile reach of the tidal Potomac downstream from Washington.
Key Findings on the Potomac River’s SAV:
Native SAV cover increased tenfold from 288 to 3081 acres.
The overall area covered by SAV in the Potomac more than doubled since 1990, increasing from 4207 to 8441 acres.
The diversity of SAV has increased. In 1990 the exotic hydrilla was 10 times more abundant than any other species. In 2007 the abundance of the 7 most frequently occurring species are more evenly matched.
In 1990, more than 80% of the total SAV was hydrilla; in 2007 hydrilla declined to 20%.
Results suggest declining fitness of exotic species relative to native species during restoration.
These results are consistent with a multi-agency study released in July, which correlated nutrient reductions with gains in the abundance of SAV in some Chesapeake Bay tributaries, while noting a negative correlation within the bay between SAV and nitrogen.
The study was supported by USGS National Research Program; U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore; the Metropolitan Washington Council of Government’s Aquatic Plant Management Program; and the Fisheries Division of the District of Columbia Department of Health.
Images and more information on SAV, the Potomac River, and the Chesapeake Bay are available on the project website and the USGS Chesapeake Bay Activities page.
A report issued today by key environmental and scientific federal agencies assesses the increasing prevalence of low-oxygen “dead zones” in U.S. coastal waters and outlines a series of research and policy steps that could help reverse the decades-long trend. The interagency report notes that incidents of hypoxia—a condition in which oxygen levels drop so low that fish and other animals are stressed or killed—have increased nearly 30-fold since 1960, when data started to be collected.
The report was compiled by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and had significant inputs from the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science. It provides a comprehensive list of the more than 300 U.S. coastal water bodies affected by hypoxia and, in eight case studies, highlights a range of representative ecosystems affected by hypoxia.
The USGS provided critical measurements and modeling of freshwater and nutrient delivery to coastal waters throughout the Nation.
The full release and report can be found at http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/ostp/nstc/oceans.