Phase I Results and Data Portal

Phase I Results and Data Portal

The sections below provide the results of all of the elements of the Phase I area Long Island Sound Cable Fund (LISCF) Seafloor Habitat Mapping initiative.  Each section  provides a link to the respective chapters from the LISMaRC Phase I Final Report to provide information on the background, data acquisition, data analyses, results and discussion of findings.  Each section also has a  link to a table that contains a preview of the spatial data, the attendant metadata that provides the data attributes, collection and processing information and a link to download the data from the LISCF data archive sponsored by the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

 

Map of the bathymetry (water depth) in the Phase I area

Map of the bathymetry (water depth) in the Phase I area

Shallow Water Acoustic Mapping

The first step in benthic habitat mapping has typically been the collection and analysis of high-resolution acoustic bathymetric and backscatter data that reveal seabed features, sedimentary processes, and sediment distribution patterns.  The LIS Cable Fund teams mapped several areas in the Phase I area.

Citation:

Click here to access the spatial data and associated metadata.

 

Map of the sediment grain size in the Phase II area

Map of sediment type distribution in the Phase II area

Sediment Texture and Grain Size Distribution

Sediment characterization is a critical component of habitat mapping and includes the shape, size, and spatial arrangement of sediment particles.  Sediment grain size directly influences the species that can inhabit a particular area,  so gravel, sand, silt and clay and various mixtures of these major grain size classes are relevant attributes for classifying benthic habitats.

Citation: Ackerman, S. & Babb, I. (2021). Sediment Texture and Grain Size Distribution. p. 32-46 in: “Seafloor Mapping of Long Island Sound – Final Report: Phase II Project.”

Click here to access the spatial data and associated metadata.

 

Acoustic patch types classified in the Phase II area

Map of acoustic patch types classified in the Phase II area

Seafloor/Habitat Characterization

Several types of data representing different seafloor characteristics were used to classify and subsequently characterize the seafloor in the study area. These included a multibeam backscatter mosaic, bathymetry, seafloor rugosity as measured by the Terrain Roughness Index (TRI), maximum physical bottom stress, and sediment grain-size composition.  A series of analyses were conducted using these data to develop acoustic patch types that represent general habitat areas with distinct environmental characteristics that are potential determinants of the kinds of infaunal and epifaunal communities that may be found within them.

Citation: Schneeburger, C. and Zajac, R. N. (2021). “Seafloor/Habitat Characterization” p. 47-65 in The Long Island Sound Habitat Mapping Initiative Phase II – Eastern Long Island Sound – Final Report (Unpublished project report).

Click here to access the spatial data and associated metadata.

 

Spatial distribution of total abundance of infauna among the sample locations in the LIS Phase II study Area

Total abundance of infauna in the LIS Phase II study Area

Ecological Characterization

Ecological characterization is, arguably, one of the most important aspects of benthic habitat mapping, as it provides the detailed information about the living resources living in an area that potentially are impacted by human activities.  The infauna, or those organisms that live in the seafloor sediments, are important components of the Sound's ecosystem, either as food sources for other  commercially and ecologically important species, or as bio-engineers structuring the seafloor.  Similarly, the epifauna, those organisms that live on the seafloor, are also important food sources and provide physical structure that other species use as habitat.

Citation: Zajac, R.N., Auster, P.J., Conroy, C.N., Walton, O., Schneeberger, C., Govert, N.M. (2021).  “Ecological Characterization” p. 66-238 in The Long Island Sound Habitat Mapping Initiative Phase II – Eastern Long Island Sound – Final Report. (Unpublished project report).

Click here to access the spatial data and associated metadata.

 

Map of bottom stress due to tides in the Phase II area

Map of bottom stress due to tides in the Phase II area

Physical Oceanographic Characterization

The physical oceanographic environment impacts all of the other attributes of the seafloor habitat mapping initiative.  The LISMaRC team employed multiple observations of the physical oceanography of the Phase II area using shipboard sampling systems and seafloor observatories.  These data were integrated into the LIS FVCOM model to produce predictive maps of bottom temperature, salinity, bottom stress and tidal and subtidal currents, all of these parameters greatly influence the distribution of benthic fauna.

Citation: O’Donnell, J., McCardell, G., Howard-Strobel, M.M. (2021). “Physical Oceanographic Characterization” p. 239-261 in “The Long Island Sound Habitat Mapping Initiative Phase II – Eastern Long Island Sound – Final Report” (Unpublished project report).

Click here to access the spatial data and associated metadata.