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By Meredith C. Payne, Deborah
A. Reusser, Henry Lee II, and Cheryl A. Brown
Abstract
Coastal sea surface temperature (SST) is an important environmental
characteristic in determining the suitability of habitat for nearshore
marine and estuarine organisms. This publication describes and provides
access to an easy-to-use coastal SST dataset for ecologists, biogeographers,
oceanographers, and other scientists conducting research on nearshore
marine habitats or processes. The data cover the Temperate Northern Pacific
Ocean
as defined by the "Marine Ecosystems of the World" (MEOW) biogeographic
schema developed by The Nature Conservancy. The spatial resolution of
the SST data is 4-km grid cells within 20 km of the shore. The data span
a 29-year period – from September 1981 to December 2009. These
SST data were derived from Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer
(AVHRR) instrument measurements compiled into monthly means as part of
the Pathfinder versions 5.0 and 5.1 (PFSST V50 and V51) Project. The
processing
methods used to transform the data from their native Hierarchical Data
Format Scientific Data Set (HDF SDS) to georeferenced, spatial datasets
capable of being read into geographic information systems (GIS) software
are explained. In addition, links are provided to examples of scripts
involved in the data processing steps. The scripts were written in the
Python programming language, which is supported by ESRI's ArcGIS version
9 or later. The processed data files are also provided in text (.csv)
and Access 2003 Database (.mdb) formats. All data except the raster files
include attributes identifying realm, province, and ecoregion as defined
by the MEOW classification schema. |