Projects
The scientific framework of the Census of Marine Life comprises a global information system assimilating data and information from field projects investigating what now lives in six ocean realms (Human Edges, Hidden Boundaries, Central Waters, Active Geology, Ice Oceans, and Microbe) and projects designed to investigate the history of marine animal populations and to forecast the future of marine populations and ecosystems.
Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS)
A web-based provider of global geo-referenced information on marine species, with online tools for visualizing relationships among species and their environment.
Pacific Ocean Shelf Tracking Project (POST)
A program to develop and promote the application of new electronic tagging technology to study usage of marine environments and migration routes of Pacific Salmon.
Census of Coral Reefs (CReefs)
An international cooperative effort to increase tropical taxonomic expertise, conduct a taxonomically diversified global census of coral reef ecosystems, and improve access to and unify coral reef ecosystem information scattered throughout the globe.
Natural Geography in Shore Areas (NaGISA)
An international collaborative effort to inventory and monitor biodiversity in the narrow inshore zone of the world's oceans at depths of less than 20 meters.
Gulf of Maine Program (GoMA)
A project documenting patterns of biodiversity and related processes in the Gulf of Maine, which will be used to establish ecosystem-based management of the area.
Continental Margin Ecosystems (COMARGE)
An integrated effort to document and explain biodiversity patterns on gradient-dominated continental margins, including the potential interactions among their variety of habitats and ecosystems.
Census of Diversity of Abyssal Marine Life (CeDAMar)
A deep-sea project documenting species diversity of abyssal plains to increase understanding of the historical causes and ecological factors regulating biodiversity and global change.
Mid-Atlantic Ridge Ecosystem Project (MAR-ECO)
An international exploratory study of the macrofauna of the northern mid-Atlantic Ocean including the processes that control their distribution and community structures in the waters around the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
Tagging of Pacific Predators (TOPP)
A program using electronic tagging technologies to study migration patterns of large open-ocean animals and the oceanographic factors controlling these patterns.
