Greetings all, we are pleased to share our new open access publication:

https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2020.00109
Using Satellite AIS to Analyze Vessel Speeds Off the Coast of Washington State, 
U.S., as a Risk Analysis for Cetacean-Vessel Collisions
Nathan C. Greig1,2,3, Ellen M. 
Hines<https://www.frontiersin.org/people/u/189865>1,2*, Samantha 
Cope<https://www.frontiersin.org/people/u/761066>1,4 and XiaoHang Liu2
*       1Estuary & Ocean Science Center, San Francisco State University, 
Tiburon, CA, United States
*       2Department of Geography & Environment, San Francisco State University, 
San Francisco, CA, United States
*       3Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District, Los Altos, CA, United States
*       4ProtectedSeas, Anthropocene Institute, Palo Alto, CA, United States

Most species of whales are vulnerable to vessel collisions, and the probability 
of lethality increases logistically with vessel speed. An Automatic 
Identification System (AIS) can provide valuable vessel activity data, but 
terrestrial-based AIS has a limited spatial range. As the need for open ocean 
monitoring increases, AIS broadcasts relayed over earth-orbiting satellites, 
satellite AIS (SAIS), provides a method for expanding the range of AIS 
broadcast reception. We used SAIS data from 2013 and 2014 to calculate vessel 
density and speed over ground around the coast of Washington state in the 
northwestern United States. Nearby shipping lanes connecting the Ports of 
Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, and in Canada, Vancouver, have the greatest density 
of vessel traffic arriving and departing. Knowledge of shipping activity is 
important in this area due to the nearby presence of NOAA designated Cetacean 
Density and Distribution Working Group's Biologically Important Areas (BIA) for 
large whale species vulnerable to vessel collisions. We quantified density and 
speed for each vessel type that transits through BIA's. We found that cargo and 
tanker vessels traveled the farthest distance at the greatest speeds. As 
ship-strike risk assessments have traditionally relied on terrestrial AIS, we 
explored issues in the application of SAIS data. Temporal gaps in SAIS data led 
to a resulting systematic underestimation of vessel speed in calculated speed 
over ground. However, SAIS can be helpful in documenting minimum vessel speeds 
across large geographic areas and across national boundaries, especially beyond 
the reach of terrestrial AIS receivers. SAIS data can also be useful in 
examining vessel density at broad scales and could be used to assess basin-wide 
open ocean routes. Future use of additional satellite platforms with AIS 
receivers and technological advances will help rectify this issue and improve 
data coverage and quality.


Ellen Hines, PhD
Associate Director and Professor of Geography & Environment
Estuary and Ocean Science Center
San Francisco State University
3150 Paradise Dr. Tiburon, CA 94920
415 338 3512, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://eoscenter.sfsu.edu/content/ellen-hines

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