Sea Grant/Space Grant Fellow Wins Lightning Talk Award
Shannon Ricci, the 2020-21 North Carolina Sea Grant/North Carolina Space Grant research fellow, recently won second place for her lightning talk “Assessment of Visitation Trends at North Carolina Artificial Reefs Using High-Resolution Satellite Imagery” at the 2021 University Consortium Geographic Information Science Symposium.
The joint North Carolina Sea Grant/North Carolina Space Grant Research Fellowship supports interdisciplinary approaches to address research needs for the state’s nearshore environments and coastal areas and watersheds. The fellowship specifically funds projects that utilize relevant measurement instruments and/or remote-sensing data resources from NASA and NOAA.
For her fellowship, Ricci, a Ph.D. student in the Center for Geospatial Analytics at North Carolina State University, used remote sensing technology and satellite images to study how frequently recreational boats visited selected artificial reef sites that the North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries (NCDMF) maintains through its artificial reef program.
While environmental impacts of the reefs are well documented, economic impacts are less understood, particularly when it comes to knowing how often boats are visiting and using the reefs. Before Ricci’s study, data on recreational fishing’s impact on the coastal region had been collected only through boat-ramp surveys and mail-in surveys.
Read about the North Carolina Sea Grant/North Carolina Space Grant Research Fellowship.
Read about the 2019-20 NC Sea Grant – NC Space Grant Fellows Emily Ury and Melinda Martinez and their study using remote sensing data from NASA to understand the impact of saltwater intrusion in North Carolina wetlands.
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