Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/108862
Title: Coastal high-frequency radars in the Mediterranean–part 2 : applications in support of science priorities and societal needs
Authors: Reyes, Emma
Aguiar, Eva
Bendoni, Michele
Berta, Maristella
Brandini, Carlo
Cáceres-Euse, Alejandro
Capodici, Fulvio
Cardin, Vanessa
Cianelli, Daniela
Ciraolo, Giuseppe
Corgnati, Lorenzo
Dadić, Vlado
Doronzo, Bartolomeo
Drago, Aldo
Dumas, Dylan
Falco, Pierpaolo
Fattorini, Maria
Fernandes, Maria J.
Gauci, Adam
Gómez, Roberto
Griffa, Annalisa
Guérin, Charles-Antoine
Hernández-Carrasco, Ismael
Hernández-Lasheras, Jaime
Ličer, Matjaž
Lorente, Pablo
Magaldi, Marcello G.
Mantovani, Carlo
Mihanović, Hrvoje
Molcard, Anne
Mourre, Baptiste
Révelard, Adèle
Reyes-Suárez, Catalina
Saviano, Simona
Sciascia, Roberta
Taddei, Stefano
Tintoré, Joaquín
Toledo, Yaron
Uttieri, Marco
Vilibić, Ivica
Zambianchi, Enrico
Orfila, Alejandro
Keywords: Maritime law
Coastal zone management -- Mediterranean region
Remote sensing
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982 December 10)
Intracoastal waterways -- Mediterranean region
Coastal ecosystem health
Environmental monitoring -- Mediterranean region
Green New Deal -- European Union countries
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Copernicus GmbH
Citation: Reyes, E., Aguiar, E., Bendoni, M., Berta, M., Brandini, C., Cáceres-Euse, A.,...Orfila, A. (2022). Coastal high-frequency radars in the Mediterranean–Part 2: Applications in support of science priorities and societal needs. Ocean Science, 18(3), 797-837.
Abstract: The Mediterranean Sea is a prominent climate-change hot spot, with many socioeconomically vital coastal areas being the most vulnerable targets for maritime safety, diverse met-ocean hazards and marine pollution. Providing an unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution at wide coastal areas, high-frequency radars (HFRs) have been steadily gaining recognition as an effective land-based remote sensing technology for continuous monitoring of the surface circulation, increasingly waves and occasionally winds. HFR measurements have boosted the thorough scientific knowledge of coastal processes, also fostering a broad range of applications, which has promoted their integration in coastal ocean observing systems worldwide, with more than half of the European sites located in the Mediterranean coastal areas. In this work, we present a review of existing HFR data multidisciplinary science-based applications in the Mediterranean Sea, primarily focused on meeting end-user and science-driven requirements, addressing regional challenges in three main topics: (i) maritime safety, (ii) extreme hazards and (iii) environmental transport process. Additionally, the HFR observing and monitoring regional capabilities in the Mediterranean coastal areas required to underpin the underlying science and the further development of applications are also analyzed. The outcome of this assessment has allowed us to provide a set of recommendations for future improvement prospects to maximize the contribution to extending science-based HFR products into societally relevant downstream services to support blue growth in the Mediterranean coastal areas, helping to meet the UN's Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and the EU's Green Deal goals.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/108862
ISSN: 18120792
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacSciGeo



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