by wpadmin | Jun 8, 2017 | EcoSystem Indicator Partnership |
By Cathy Coletti, N.H. Department of Environmental Services Coastal Program In spring 2015, 65 volunteers, including 45 fifth grade students from Seabrook Middle School, used their hands to help build resiliency in the Hampton-Seabrook Estuary in New Hampshire. They...
by wpadmin | Jun 8, 2017 | EcoSystem Indicator Partnership |
By Robert Capozi, Climate Change Adaptation Specialist The Atlantic provinces Climate Change Secretariats in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland and Labrador, along with St. Mary’s University, Dalhousie University, and engineering...
by wpadmin | Jun 8, 2017 | EcoSystem Indicator Partnership |
By Prassede Vella, Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management Documenting trends and conditions across a region as diverse as Massachusetts Bay and Cape Cod Bay is not easy, but that’s just what the Massachusetts Bays National Estuary Program set out to do at the...
by wpadmin | Jun 8, 2017 | EcoSystem Indicator Partnership |
By Reba McIver, Marine Debris Program Coordinator, Huntsman Marine Science Centre This September a Marine Debris program for the southwest Bay of Fundy was formed through the collaborative effects of the Marine Debris Strategy Advisory Committee (MDSAC). The MDSAC is...
by wpadmin | Jun 8, 2017 | EcoSystem Indicator Partnership |
Have you ever been out and about in a new location and wondered what groups might be monitoring the environment near you? ESIP’s new smartphone app – the ICUC app (“I See You See”) helps you find the answer to that question while also using your mobile device to...
by wpadmin | Jun 8, 2017 | EcoSystem Indicator Partnership |
In May 2012 ESIP released a first version of the Eutrophication Fact Sheet. The fact sheet covered four important eutrophication indicators: dissolved oxygen, nutrient loading, chlorophyll a, and water clarity. Unfortunately, due to a lack data, the fact sheet did not...