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Manitowoc R UVDOC data 2011
Manitowoc R UVDOC data 2011. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Williamson, C., S. Madronich, A. Lal, R. Zepp, R. Lucas, E. Overholt, K. Rose, S.G. Schladow, and J. Lee-Taylor. Altmetric: 165More detail Article | OPEN Climate change-induced increases in precipitation are reducing the potential for solar ultraviolet radiation to inactivate pathogens in surface waters. Scientific Reports. Nature Publishing Group, London, UK, 7: 13033, (2017).
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Manitowoc R UVDOC data 2011
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Manitowoc R UVDOC data 2011. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Williamson, C., S. Madronich, A. Lal, R. Zepp, R. Lucas, E. Overholt, K. Rose, S.G. Schladow, and J. Lee-Taylor. Altmetric: 165More detail Article | OPEN Climate change-induced increases in precipitation are reducing the potential for solar ultraviolet radiation to inactivate pathogens in surface waters. Scientific Reports. Nature Publishing Group, London, UK, 7: 13033, (2017).
Oceanographic and biological water parameter data collected from the M110 and M110X moorings in Lake Michigan, Great Lakes region to support the long-term ecological research Muskegon transect studies by NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory from 2021-05-18 to 2022-05-17 (NCEI Accession 0276345)
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Two moorings were deployed near the M110 station by the NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL) from May 2021 to May 2022 and September 2021 to May 2022. These observations support the GLERL Long-Term Ecological Research program. The M110 station is part of the Muskegon Transect in Lake Michigan near the NOAA Lake Michigan Field Station, Muskegon, MI. The first mooring, “M110”, is an oceanographic mooring containing a temperature string and an acoustic doppler current profiler approximately 200 meters from the temperature string. The second mooring, “M110X”, is a physical and biological mooring that collects temperature and fluorometer measurements over the winter. The approximate depth of this mooring location was 110 m. The M110 deployment’s temperature string collects vertical water temperatures at hourly time intervals at 16 depths by SeaBird and Tidbits thermistors. Current speed and direction were collected at sub-hourly time intervals at 49 depths by a Teledyne RDI WorkHorse acoustic doppler current profiler. The data files for this mooring contain the station name “noaa-glerl-michigan-lter-m110-” in the file name. The physical and biological mooring collects surface and bottom temperature and fluorometer measurements hourly. The temperature sensors were Sea-Bird 39. The Wet Labs fluorometers measured voltage, which were converted to chlorophyll concentrations. Please see the “Supplemental Information” for more information about the chlorophyll concentrations. The data files for this mooring contain the station name “noaa-glerl-michigan-lter-m110x-” in the file name. All measurements were collected continuously during this time period. Included in this data package are two data formats, netCDF and CSV. Metadata is included in the netCDF file, the CSV files also contain a data dictionary explaining the column headings.
Oceanographic and biological water parameter data collected from the M110 and M110X moorings in Lake Michigan, Great Lakes region to support the long-term ecological research Muskegon transect studies by NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory from 2014-05-05 to 2020-08-12 (NCEI Accession 0282942)
공공데이터포털
Two moorings were deployed near the M110 station by the NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL) from 2014 through 2020. These observations support the GLERL Long-Term Ecological Research program. The M110 station is part of the Muskegon Transect in Lake Michigan near the NOAA Lake Michigan Field Station, Muskegon, MI. The first mooring, “M110”, is an oceanographic mooring containing a temperature string and an acoustic doppler current profiler approximately 200 meters from the temperature string. The second mooring, “M110X”, is a physical and biological mooring that collects temperature and fluorometer measurements over the winter. The approximate depth of this mooring location was 110 m. The M110 deployment’s temperature string collects vertical water temperatures at hourly time intervals at multiple depths by SeaBird, HOBO Onset, and HOBO Tidbits thermistors. Current speed and direction were collected at sub-hourly time intervals at multiple depths by a Teledyne RDI WorkHorse acoustic doppler current profiler. The data files for this mooring contain the station name “noaa-glerl-michigan-lter-m110-” in the file name. The physical and biological mooring collects surface and bottom temperature and fluorometer measurements hourly. The temperature sensors were HOBO Tidbit and Sea-Bird 39 thermistors. The Wet Labs fluorometers measured voltage, which were converted to chlorophyll concentrations. Please see the “Supplemental Information” for more information about the chlorophyll concentrations. The data files for this mooring contain the station name “noaa-glerl-michigan-lter-m110x-” in the file name. All measurements were collected continuously during the deployments. Note the deployments are not continuous throughout this time period. Several sensors shown on the mooring diagrams failed during deployments, those data are not included in this accession. Included in this data package are two data formats, netCDF and CSV. Metadata is included in the netCDF file, the CSV files also contain a data dictionary explaining the column headings.
Oceanographic and biological water parameter data collected from the M110 and M110X moorings in Lake Michigan, Great Lakes region to support the long-term ecological research Muskegon transect studies by NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory from 2020-08-12 to 2021-05-19 (NCEI Accession 0255938)
공공데이터포털
Two moorings were deployed near the M110 station by the NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL) from August 2020 to May 2021 and October 2020 to May 2021. These observations support the GLERL Long-Term Ecological Research program. The M110 station is part of the Muskegon Transect in Lake Michigan near the NOAA Lake Michigan Field Station, Muskegon, MI. The first mooring, “M110”, is an oceanographic mooring containing a temperature string and an acoustic doppler current profiler approximately 200 meters from the temperature string. The second mooring, “M110X”, is a physical and biological mooring that collects temperature and fluorometer measurements near the surface and bottom over the winter. The approximate depth of this mooring location was 110 m. The M110 deployment’s temperature string collects vertical water temperatures at hourly and sub-hourly time intervals at 16 depths by Hobo Onset and Tidbits thermistors. Current speed and direction were collected at sub-hourly time intervals at 49 depths by a Teledyne RDI WorkHorse acoustic doppler current profiler. The data files for this mooring contain the station name “noaa-glerl-michigan-lter-m110-” in the file name. The physical and biological mooring collects surface and bottom temperature and fluorometer measurements hourly. The temperature sensors were Sea-Bird 39. The Wet Labs fluorometers measured voltage, which were converted to chlorophyll concentrations. Please see the “Supplemental Information” for more information about the chlorophyll concentrations. The data files for this mooring contain the station name “noaa-glerl-michigan-lter-m110x-” in the file name. All measurements were collected continuously during this time period. Included in this data package are two data formats, netCDF and CSV. Metadata is included in the netCDF file, the CSV files also contain a data dictionary explaining the column headings.
Jackson Lakes Water chemistry and genomic data 2106-2017
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Data is provided for genomic , biogeochemical and weather data for Jackson Lakes in Pensacola Fl. from the fall of 2016 to the fall of 2017. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Rogers, J., R. Devereux, J. James, S. George, and K. Forshay. Seasonal Distribution of Cyanobacteria in Three Urban Eutrophic Lakes Results from an Epidemic-like Response to Environmental Conditions.. CURRENT MICROBIOLOGY. Springer, New York, NY, USA, 78(6): 2298–2316, (2021).
Wisconsin Lake Temperature Metrics Decreasing Clarity
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It is well recognized that the climate is warming in response to anthropogenic emission of greenhouse gases. Over the last decade, this has had a warming effect on lakes. Water clarity is also known to effect water temperature in lakes. What is unclear is how a warming climate might interact with changes in water clarity in lakes. As part of a project at the USGS Office of Water Information, several water clarity scenarios were simulated for lakes in Wisconsin to examine how changing water clarity interacts with climate change to affect lake temperatures at a broad scale. This data set contains the following parameters: year, WBIC, durStrat, max_schmidt_stability, mean_schmidt_stability_JAS, mean_schmidt_stability_July, SthermoD_mean_JAS, SthermoD_mean, lake_average_temp, peak_lake_average_temp, lake_average_temp_JAS, mean_epi_temp, mean_hypo_temp, mean_surf_temp, mean_bottom_temp, peak_surf_temp, peak_bottom_temp, mean_surf_temp_JAS, mean_bottom_temp_JAS, mean_bottom_temp_365, mean_surf_temp_365, mean_1m_temp, mean_surf_JA, GDD_wtr_5c, GDD_wtr_10c, volume_mean_m_3, simulation_length_days, mean_volumetric_temp, kd, out_val calculated for 2210 lakes.
R1: Aquatic Health and Climate Change Program: Continuous Air and Stream Temperature Data & Tools (Template Annual Workbook Compilers, Logger Log)
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Continuous Temperature Data, Logger log and tools for compiling annual datasets. Data (Collected across multiple field stations (Kootenai, Little Pend Oreille, Malheur, William L. Finley, and Willapa NWRs) is compiled at a regular frequency into an annual dataset, and then a timeseries.
R1: Aquatic Health and Climate Change Program: Continuous Air and Stream Temperature Data & Tools (Template Annual Workbook Compilers, Logger Log)
공공데이터포털
Continuous Temperature Data, Logger log and tools for compiling annual datasets. Data (Collected across multiple field stations (Kootenai, Little Pend Oreille, Malheur, William L. Finley, and Willapa NWRs) is compiled at a regular frequency into an annual dataset, and then a timeseries.
William L. Finley NWR: Continuous Air and Stream Temperature Data at Muddy Creek (Aquatic Health and Climate Change) - Raw and Processed Data
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Continuous Temperature Data. Raw Hobo data files collected at William L. Finley NWR (Muddy Creek) and compiled at a regular frequency into a annual (cleaned) dataset (Excel). Muddy Creek had four locations monitored during the pilot project and these data are included in this dataset. Each location could have multiple loggers deployed (planned redundancy in case of logger failure). See the CURRENT-TL-Logger Log for details at https://ecos.fws.gov/ServCat/Reference/Profile/132469.