PacIOOS ERDDAP
Easier access to scientific data
 
 
griddap Subset tabledap Make A Graph wms files Title Summary FGDC ISO 19115 Info Background Info RSS Email Institution Dataset ID
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/cwb_water_quality.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/cwb_water_quality https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/cwb_water_quality.graph Hawaii Clean Water Branch (CWB) Beach Water Quality Data Exposure to sewage contaminated recreational waters may cause gastrointestinal illnesses in swimmers. The State of Hawaii Department of Health (HIDOH) Clean Water Branch (CWB) monitors the waters of Hawaii's beaches for concentrations of Enterococcus, which acts as an indicator of pathogens. The CWB also uses Clostridium perfringens as a secondary tracer of sewage contamination. Results of this monitoring are evaluated using a decision rule to determine whether a beach is safe (\"Compliant\") or not safe (on \"Alert\") for swimming and other water contact activities. If a beach is found to be on \"Alert\" due to elevated indicator bacteria levels, the CWB issues public warnings and alerts and determines whether resampling of the area is necessary.\n\nUnder the U.S. BEACH Act, the State of Hawaii receives an annual grant to implement its beach monitoring program. This requires the State to conduct a monitoring and notification program that is consistent with performance criteria published by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 2002. In March 2010, the EPA approved amendments to the Hawaii Administrative Rules (HAR), Chapter 11-54, Water Quality Standards (CWB QAPrgP, HIDOH 2011, Appendix D), which revised the previous State Enterococcus criteria of a geometric mean (GM) of 7 colony-forming units (CFU) per 100 mL and a single sample maximum (SSM) of 100 CFU/100 mL to meet current EPA guidelines. The State of Hawaii now uses the EPA recommended Enterococcus GM and SSM for recreational waters consistent in the 1986 Ambient Water Quality Criteria for Bacteria. The criterion lists the GM and SSM for marine waters as 35 CFU/100 mL and 104 CFU/100 mL, respectively.\n\nThe CWB utilizes Clostridium perfringens as a secondary tracer in addition to the Enterococcus indicator to help distinguish between sewage and non-sewage sources of elevated Enterococcus levels in marine coastal waters. The reliability of Enterococcus as an indicator organism in tropical environments has been questioned. This issue was formally documented in the report, Tropical Water Quality Indicator Workshop (Fujioka and Byappanahalli, 2003).\n\nOne of the limitations of all available and EPA-approved test methods is that the sample must be incubated for about 24 hours. As a result, the public finds out today when they shouldn't have gone in the water yesterday. As a result, warning signs on the beach may or may not be reflective of actual water quality because they are based on tests performed one or more days ago.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\n... (12 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/cwb_water_quality_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/cwb_water_quality_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/cwb_water_quality/index.htmlTable http://www.beachapedia.org/State_of_the_Beach/State_Reports/HI/Water_Quality (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/cwb_water_quality.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=cwb_water_quality&showErrors=false&email= State of Hawaii Clean Water Branch (CWB) cwb_water_quality
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/hui_water_quality.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/hui_water_quality https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/hui_water_quality.graph Hui O Ka Wai Ola Water Quality Data The goal of the Hui O Ka Wai Ola (Association Of The Living Waters) citizen-science based water quality program is to increase the capacity for monitoring water quality in Maui (2016-) and Lanai (2023-) coastal waters by generating reliable data to assess long-term water-quality conditions and detect temporal trends. These data augment the data produced by the Hawaii Department of Health (DOH) Clean Water Branch (CWB) beach monitoring program.\n    \nData are collected and analyzed every two or three weeks for physical and chemical parameters, including ocean salinity, pH, temperature, organic nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorous compounds), dissolved oxygen (DO), and total suspended sediment (TSS). Some water samples are immediately tested at mobile labs while others are processed for testing at University of Hawaii and/or other labs.\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\nlocation_id (sampling site identifier)\nlocation_name\nsample_id (sample identifier)\nsession_id (sampling session identifier)\nwater_temperature (Celsius)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1)\nturbidity (turbidity NTU, 1)\nph (1)\noxygen (dissolved oxygen concentration, mg/L)\noxygen_saturation (dissolved oxygen saturation, %)\nnitrogen (total dissolved nitrogen, ug/L)\nphosphorus (total dissolved phosphorus, ug/L)\nphosphate (phosphorus as orthophosphate, ug/L)\nsilicate (ug/L)\nnitrate_nitrite (nitrate plus nitrite, ug/L)\nammonia (ug/L)\nqa_comments (quality assurance issues or comments)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/hui_water_quality_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/hui_water_quality_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/hui_water_quality/index.htmlTable https://www.huiokawaiola.com (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/hui_water_quality.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=hui_water_quality&showErrors=false&email= Hui O Ka Wai Ola hui_water_quality
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/maui_water_quality.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/maui_water_quality https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/maui_water_quality.graph Maui Citizen Science Coastal Water Quality Data A network of citizen science volunteers periodically monitored water quality at several beaches across the island of Maui in the State of Hawaii during the years 2010-2016. This community-based monitoring effort provided valuable data for resource management purposes. Informed volunteer networks can serve as a community's \"eyes and ears\" and will often provide the first indications of changes to a system. In addition to the value of early detection, it is important to maintain ongoing monitoring efforts to compile data and document resource conditions.\n\nIn addition to water temperature, salinity, turbidity (water clarity), and pH, sampling sites were also monitored for harmful bacteria levels of Enterococcus through 2014-06-26. This indicator bacteria has been correlated with the presence of human pathogens (disease-causing organisms) and therefore with human illnesses such as gastroenteritis, diarrhea, and various infections in epidemiological studies. As such, it is commonly measured in beach water quality monitoring programs. For reference, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 1986 Ambient Water Quality Criteria for Bacteria recommends that a water quality alert is posted if either: (a.) the latest water sample exceeds 104 CFU/100 mL of Enterococcus, or (b.) the geometric mean of the past 30 days of water samples exceeds 35 CFU/100 mL. One of the limitations of all available and EPA-approved test methods is that the sample must be incubated for about 24 hours.\n\nData were managed through an online repository, the Coral Reef Monitoring Data Portal (now defunct), developed and coordinated by the Coral Reef Alliance (CORAL) and its partners with funding provided by the Hawaii Tourism Authority (HTA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Data collection was coordinated by the Hawaii Division of Aquatic Resources (DAR), the Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary (HIHWNMS), Aquanimity Now, the Digital Bus, Save Honolua Coalition, Project S.E.A.-Link, and other local organizations and agencies. Data are publicly distributed by the Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS).\n\ncdm_data_type = Point\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\n... (9 more variables)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/maui_water_quality_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/maui_water_quality_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/maui_water_quality/index.htmlTable https://coral.org/maui/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/maui_water_quality.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=maui_water_quality&showErrors=false&email= Coral Reef Alliance (CORAL) maui_water_quality
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_003 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_003.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 114: Mission 3 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 3 of SeaGlider 114.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_114_003_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_114_003_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_114_003/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_114_003.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_114_003&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_114_003
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_004 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_114_004.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 114: Mission 4 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 4 of SeaGlider 114.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_114_004_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_114_004_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_114_004/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_114_004.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_114_004&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_114_004
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_001 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_001.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 1 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 1 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_001_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_001_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_001/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_001.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_001&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_001
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_002 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_002.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 2 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 2 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_002_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_002_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_002/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_002.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_002&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_002
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_003 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_003.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 3 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 3 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_003_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_003_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_003/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_003.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_003&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_003
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_006 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_006.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 6 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 6 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_006_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_006_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_006/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_006.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_006&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_006
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_007 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_007.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 7 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 7 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_007_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_007_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_007/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_007.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_007&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_007
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_008 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_008.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 8 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 8 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_008_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_008_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_008/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_008.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_008&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_008
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_009 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_139_009.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 139: Mission 9 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 9 of SeaGlider 139.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_139_009_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_139_009_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_139_009/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_139_009.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_139_009&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_139_009
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_148_017 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_148_017.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 148: Mission 17 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about ocean conditions. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 17 of SeaGlider 148.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\nglider (seaglider)\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_148_017_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_148_017_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_148_017/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_148_017.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_148_017&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_148_017
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_512_011 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_512_011.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 512: Mission 11 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about ocean conditions. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 11 of SeaGlider 512.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\nglider (seaglider)\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_512_011_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_512_011_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_512_011/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_512_011.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_512_011&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_512_011
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_001 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_001.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 1 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 1 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_001_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_001_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_001/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_001.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_001&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_001
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_003 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_003.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 3 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 3 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_003_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_003_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_003/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_003.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_003&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_003
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_004 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_004.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 4 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about currents. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 4 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_004_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_004_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_004/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_004.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_004&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_004
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_006 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/sg_523_006.graph PacIOOS Ocean Gliders: SeaGlider 523: Mission 6 As a part of PacIOOS, ocean gliders provide very detailed information about the physical and chemical condition of the waters around the Hawaiian Islands. Additionally, these data get used in computer models to make predictions about ocean conditions. Ocean gliders are small, free-swimming, unmanned vehicles that can cruise the ocean for several months gathering information about the temperature, salinity, and other water properties between the surface and 1000 m depth. A pressure sensor on the glider is able to record the depth throughout the dive. Because gliders are unmanned, they communicate with scientists on land when they are at the surface using an antenna on the end of the glider. The SeaGlider autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was designed at the University of Washington (UW) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). These data are taken from Mission 6 of SeaGlider 523.\n\ncdm_data_type = Trajectory\nVARIABLES:\ntrajectory\nglider (seaglider)\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\naltitude (m)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nconductivity (S m-1)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1e-3)\ndensity (kg m-3)\npressure (dbar)\ndive_number (1)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/sg_523_006_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/sg_523_006_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/sg_523_006/index.htmlTable http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/seagliders/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/sg_523_006.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=sg_523_006&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) sg_523_006
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/nss_wqspp_008.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/nss_wqspp_008 https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/nss_wqspp_008.graph PacIOOS Water Quality Sensor Partnership Program 008: Maalaea Harbor, Maui, Hawaii The nearshore sensors are part of the Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) and are designed to measure a variety of ocean parameters at fixed point locations. The PacIOOS Water Quality Sensor Partnership Program (WQSPP) supports scientists and natural resource managers to collect water quality data in order to inform research, conservation, planning, and resource management projects in the U.S. Insular Pacific region. Comprised of a network of \"roving\" water quality nearshore sensors, the WQSPP provides participating partners with sensors, data management, and technical capacity-building to allow for robust data collection. As part of the WQSPP, the Maui Nui Marine Resource Council (MNMRC) deployed a nearshore sensor at Maalaea Harbor, Maui. The non-profit organization is interested to learn more about the effects of tides, wind, and swell on water quality in the harbor, and monitor water quality variability over time. The data will help inform the watershed management plan \"Vision for Pohakea\", which aims to reduce sediment and pollutants in Maalaea Bay and its harbor. MNMRC is also partnering with Waterkeepers Hawaiian Islands to utilize several thousand oysters in the harbor to help improve water quality. Rotating at approximately monthly intervals to various locations within the harbor, the instrument is a Sea-Bird Scientific SBE 16plus V2 SeaCAT CTD coupled with a Sea-Bird Scientific ECO FLNTU optical sensor.\n\ncdm_data_type = TimeSeries\nVARIABLES:\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\ndepth (Distance below mean sea level, m)\nstation_name (station)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1)\nturbidity (turbidity NTU, 1)\nchlorophyll (ug/L)\npressure (water pressure, dbar)\nplatform1 (platform)\ninstrument1 (instrument)\ncrs (coordinate reference system)\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/nss_wqspp_008_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/nss_wqspp_008_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/nss_wqspp_008/index.htmlTable https://www.pacioos.hawaii.edu/water/sensor-maalaea/ (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/nss_wqspp_008.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=nss_wqspp_008&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) nss_wqspp_008
https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/infinite_float_00001_ctd.subset https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/infinite_float_00001_ctd https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/tabledap/infinite_float_00001_ctd.graph Seatrec infiniTE Float: Deployment 1: CTD: Kona, Hawaii Island, Hawaii The Seatrec infiniTE (Infinite Thermal Energy) float is the first subsurface ocean profiling platform powered by clean, renewable energy to address the power constraints of traditional floats. By combining an autonomous profiling float with a proprietary energy harvesting system, the infiniTE float generates electricity from the ocean's temperature differences to power sensors that are not feasible on existing profiling floats. Its baseline configuration includes a conductivity, temperature, depth (CTD) sensor and can profile three times a day to a depth of approximately 1000 meters.\n\ncdm_data_type = Profile\nVARIABLES:\nprofile_number\ntime (seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z)\nlongitude (degrees_east)\nlatitude (degrees_north)\ndepth (m)\ntemperature (water temperature, Celsius)\nsalinity (salinity PSU, 1)\nenergy_used (J)\nenergy_generated (J)\nplatform1\ninstrument1\ncrs\n https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/fgdc/xml/infinite_float_00001_ctd_fgdc.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/metadata/iso19115/xml/infinite_float_00001_ctd_iso19115.xml https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/info/infinite_float_00001_ctd/index.htmlTable https://seatrec.com (external link) https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/rss/infinite_float_00001_ctd.rss https://pae-paha.pacioos.hawaii.edu/erddap/subscriptions/add.html?datasetID=infinite_float_00001_ctd&showErrors=false&email= Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS) infinite_float_00001_ctd

 
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