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Identifier Type Subject Title Web Resource
2283
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Where Do Gulls Go?
  • storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/2eb6e0e367214f73b31a6a6a9e33dd40
Description:
Herring gulls are found around the world, not only by the sea, despite often being called "seagulls". There is debate over the herring gull's taxonomic status. American ornithologists lump herring gulls in North America and Europe, while European ornithologists split them. They are often described as scavengers, though there is evidence that individual herring gulls specialize on particular food sources (intertidal, aquaculture, ocean, anthropogenic, freshwater). [show more]
2156
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Warbler Sightings on MDI from 1993-2011
Description:
Warbler Sightings on MDI from 1993-2011. Source data from Michael Good via EBird
2293
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Tracking Great White Sharks in the Gulf of Maine
  • storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/cc87e70fa052487dba9823da0a0a0f28
Description:
Acoustic Receivers are monitoring devices that listen for specific sound wavelengths. When these soundwaves are detected a data point is stored and categorized under a unique ID.
2061
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Town of Bar Harbor Shellfish Management Map
Description:
Official Town Shellfish Management Map
2068
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
The Taunton Bay Study: Eelgrass 1955-2005
Description:
Changes in Eelgrass over time in Taunton Bay, headwaters of Frenchman Bay
2045
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
The Dynamic Forest Cover of Great Duck Island
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/d708fcf0bf1941f7b0880b31c3d9fc55
Description:
Great Duck Island is a 237-acre island 15 km south of Mount Desert Island, Maine. It served as a manned Coast Guard lighthouse post from 1890 until 1986 when it was automated. Sheep grazed the island from the late 19th century until 1951, dramatically impacting the landscape and ecology of the island. In 1985, the Nature Conservancy and the State of Maine gained control of most of the island, collaborating with the College of the Atlantic Eno Research Station to monitor the ecology of the land. [show more]
2042
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
The Dorr Museum Collections and their Global Origins
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=e48489718ccd4715a66be5e264abe81a
Description:
An exploration of the George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History collections and their origins. The Dorr Museum of Natural History is unique among museums in that its collections have been prepared entirely by students.
2383
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
The Bale National Park: Harenna Forest, Ethiopia
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/a36af62382064657a1b704de1a770dc9
Description:
The Harenna forest is the largest cloud forest in Ethiopia, located in the southern region of the Bale mountain range. 60⁰ 20' and 60⁰ 50'N
2057
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
Studying Land Features using Drone Imagery
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=0cf2adf182f84d6bbd4ca1f258c5e214
Description:
Studying Chlorophyll Concentration and Land Classification using Drone Imagery
2142
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
Rockweed in Frenchman Bay
  • http://bit.ly/RockweedFrenchmanBay
Description:
Rockweed is a brown algae found on rocky shores. The most common types of rockweed are within the genus Ascophyllum spp. and Fucus spp. (the latter is shown to the left). They grow slowly and can live from 3 to 15 years before breakage. Rockweeds have fronds that bear air bladders. These 'airbags' help the algae to stand up straight under water. Rockweed lacks true roots, stems, and leaves, and because they lack a vascular system, absorb dissolved nutrients directly through the blades. Rockweed attaches to rocks with a disc-like “holdfast”, and regenerate fronds from remaining holdfasts after a natural disturbance that removes upright fronds. [show more]
2384
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
River Herring in the Concord River Watershed
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/a61c71d38b2c4701acdd4f0ef9ecc2f5
Description:
Since long ago, each spring the River Herring swam up the Concord, Sudbury and Assabet Rivers (SUASCO) in unfathomable numbers to spawn. Their numbers turned the sluggish river turbulent with movement, and their masses colored the water black. Nipmuc, Pawtucket, and Massachuset people, their ancestors before them, and later English colonists, treasured these runs for food and fertilizer, and many seasonal communities were once situated at ideal fishing places. The industrial revolution came with largely little heed to the fish or those that used them. [show more]
2398
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
River Herring Co-management in Downeast Maine
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/1d6e545864c048b9a64f4b2ccb94df16
Description:
A final project for College of the Atlantic's Fisheries, Fishermen, and Fishing Communities course 2023
2397
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
River Herring at Wight's Pond
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/c1ce96dbcab44f758bf6542c5dfafc73#n-Ly4fd3
Description:
an outreach piece from College of the Atlantic's Fisheries, Fishermen, and Fishing Communities course 2023
2387
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Pulling Natures Linchpin:
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=ab565dbb28684267922e0ed8e18a5fe8
Description:
A Study of Potential Correlations between Declining bat Populations and Modern Mosquito-born Epidemics
2364
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Project Scotland
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/04cc7cf98ec04fbabb0380d9339db30f
Description:
Natural Resource Management for Biodiversity. Understanding Scotland's protected habitats and their inhabitants.
2286
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
On Track of the Pale Clouded Yellow Butterfly
  • storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/ab563bf4db484e9d8a7fd20d76697aa6
Description:
Where it lives and how we might save it
2377
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Northern Pacific Sound Pollution
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/48c025dd8f1c4b61b00082b75ef383df
Description:
The longest distance a human shout has been heard from is just over 10 miles, and that scream happened over a lake. Researchers have estimated that a whale scream, or more so a song, can be heard from over 10,000 miles away! Though we can't always hear these songs because of their low frequencies, whales can listen and respond to each other from oceans away.
2381
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Nesting Sea Turtles on a Changing Caribbean Island
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/a08e4636ef6945b0a1a93820bcb334ca
Description:
The Buck Island Sea Turtle Research Program (BISTRP) is a long-term sea turtle monitoring project that focuses on nesting sea turtles in the Caribbean. BISTRP was initiated by the National Park Service in 1988 after Buck Island was identified as an important nesting beach for sea turtles, in particular for the critically endangered Hawksbill sea turtle. Since 1988, the program has conducted annual monitoring of the nesting sea turtles on Buck Island with the goal of identifying each nesting female, collecting biological data, and tracking nest success on the island. [show more]
2062
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Nest Site Selection of the Black Guillemot on Great Duck island
Description:
Nesting sites along the rocky berm of Great Duck Island.
2282
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
MDI Intertidal Species Relation with Sediment Types
  • storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/d21ffa9be3264eca94125a1c6707a930
Description:
Intertidal species set themselves on sediment types based on feeding patterns and protection coverage from predators.
2081
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Maine Oyster Trail Pilot Project, Damariscotta River
Description:
A Map showing land use, waterfront access, and other factors important to Oyster aquiculture.
2363
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
Life on a Barren Rock (Mount Desert Rock)
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/d82c9cb0d83145fcb7d6292983014047
Description:
Introducing the "Photosynthesizers" of Mount Desert Rock
2361
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Leach's Storm-Petrel Distribution on Great Duck Island
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/8ce6941d13fe4a679b793f2155573e48
Description:
Leach's Storm-Petrels (Hydrobates leucorhous) are Great Duck Island's most cryptic and most populous breeding seabird.
2390
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Leach's Storm-Petrel Distribution on Great Duck Island
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/8ce6941d13fe4a679b793f2155573e48
Description:
Great Duck Island (GDI) is a 91-hectare island lying 13 kilometers south of Mount Desert Island in the Gulf of Maine. GDI has a long history of human occupation, and has been farmed, grazed, and lived upon since the early 19th century. Today, approximately 85 hectares of the island are co-owned by TNC and the state of Maine and has been managed as a preserve since 1985. There is a small private inholding on the north end of the island, and the remaining five hectares are owned by the College of the Atlantic (COA). COA manages the Alice Eno Field Station out of the light station on the south end of the island, where students have conducted regular research on the ecology of the island since 1999 (Anderson 2018) [show more]
2082
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Landscape of Change
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/dcb1b25509e64b628ce40c5ae7ed4675
Description:
Exploring the Past to Build a Resilient Future To understand how climate change is affecting Mount Desert Island we need to look to the past. Our ancestors documented the natural world around them in stories, reports, journals, diaries, and letters, which are cared for in the collections of history museums and libraries. Increasingly, scientists are pulling observations and data from historic records to get a clearer picture of the natural world of the past to understand how the present is changing. [show more]