March 10, 2014
by Lisa Busch
Habitat maps are a useful tool to fisheries researchers and
assessors but are not often available for a large scale project. Jodi
Pirtle, a postdoc working for the Gulf of Alaska project, applies her seafloor
mapping skill set to the Gulf of Alaska Integrated Ecosystem project to provide
information on habitat.
Born and raised in Cordova, Alaska, Pirtle finds a lot of
meaning in the work she is contributing to the project. "I've been
thinking about this stuff my whole life," she says. In the effort to
better understand five species of commercially caught fish, Pirtle has been
overlaying fisheries survey data on high resolution seafloor maps to get a
better idea of the habitat preference of different fish.
"It's landscape modeling which has been going on a long
time on land, now applied to the ocean," says Pirtle who works at the NOAA
Auke Bay Lab in Juneau. "We are taking GIS data of all kinds - kelp
beds, geology, seafloor terrain - and merging that with fisheries survey data
to generate habitat suitability models and maps." This kind of work
has gone on on a small scale throughout the Gulf but this is the first large
scale Gulf wide project of its kind.

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