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Researchers: CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere - Hobart (Associated with) ,  CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere - Hobart (Associated with) ,  Data Officer (Point of contact, Distributes) ,  Data Officer (Point of contact, Distributes) ,  Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) (Resource provider of, Associated with)
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Full description The National Mooring Network Facility (formerly known as the Australian National Mooring Network (ANMN)), is a series of national reference stations and regional moorings designed to monitor particular oceanographic phenomena in Australian coastal ocean waters.

There are nine current sub-facilities, including five regional sub-facilities. Inactive sub-facilities include: Ningaloo Moorings - WA, Deep Water Waves - Qld, Larval Fish and Acoustic Observatories.

The current sub-facilities are:
a) Queensland and Northern Australia
b) New South Wales
c) Southern Australia
d) Western Australia
e) Victoria
f) National Reference Stations (Coordination and Analysis)
g) Acidification Moorings
h) Wave Buoys
i) Marine Microplastics

The National Reference Stations were first established in the 1940’s and are the backbone component of the observing system. Extended by IMOS from three to nine sites around the entire Australian continent, the stations report integrated biological, chemical and physical oceanography time series observations, upon which more intensive local and regional scale studies can be referenced against. The regional moorings monitor the interaction between boundary currents and shelf water masses and their consequent impact upon ocean productivity (e.g. Perth Canyon Upwelling; Kangaroo Island Upwelling) and ecosystem distribution and resilience (e.g. Coral Sea interaction with the Great Barrier Reef ). Operation of the network is distributed between several operators and coordinated nationally.

The Acidification Moorings are co-located (or nearby) at three of the National Reference Stations, and provide key observations to help us understand and address the problem of increasing ocean acidification.

Lineage Maintenance and Update Frequency: continual

Notes Credit
Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) is enabled by the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS). It is operated by a consortium of institutions as an unincorporated joint venture, with the University of Tasmania as Lead Agent.

Click to explore relationships graph

154,-9 154,-37.5 114,-37.5 114,-9 154,-9

134,-23.25

text: westlimit=114.00; southlimit=-37.50; eastlimit=154.00; northlimit=-9.00

Other Information
(National Mooring Network page on IMOS website)

uri : https://imos.org.au/facility/national-mooring-network

global : c78801d0-bffe-11dc-a463-00188b4c0af8

Identifiers
  • global : f9c151bd-d95b-4af6-8cb7-21c05b7b383b
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]]

Licence & Rights

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License View details

Licence

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Rights Statement

The citation in a list of references is: "IMOS [year-of-data-download], [Title], [data-access-URL], accessed [date-of-access]."

Rights Statement

Any users of IMOS data are required to clearly acknowledge the source of the material derived from IMOS in the format: "Data was sourced from Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) – IMOS is enabled by the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure strategy (NCRIS)." If relevant, also credit other organisations involved in collection of this particular datastream (as listed in 'credit' in the metadata record).

Rights Statement

Data, products and services from IMOS are provided "as is" without any warranty as to fitness for a particular purpose.