SEAMAP AUSTRALIA - Key Persons
Job Titles:
- Research Fellow at the Institute for Marine
Dr Jacquomo Monk is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania. Much of his work focuses on turning underwater imagery into knowledge to underpin management decisions. His work has seen him explore the extraordinary deep marine environments from the dark cold waters of southern Tasmania to the clear warm waters of St Lucia. His work has made incredible inroads into advancing a national monitoring system for Australian Marine Parks. However, each glimpse below the surface is a reminder of how little we really know about what lies beneath the sea of blue.
Emma has been with the Seamap team since 2016 where she was responsible for the technical aspects of ingesting, synthesising and managing spatial data associated with Seamap's national seafloor habitat database. She is now responsible for the ongoing curation of content in the Seamap Australia portal, and generates many of the spatial synthesis products and visualisations you'll see in there. Emma works closely with the developers from Condense in designing Seamap Australia's mapping interface and analytics tools. Seamap is Emma's #1 favourite project and she'd love to hear from you with anything Seamap!
Job Titles:
- Manager
- Systems Architect
Peter Walsh is the Manager, Data and Information Systems at the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies.
Vanessa was one of the original cofounders of the Seamap Tasmania project launched in 2000. In 2019, through the recognition of a common goal - to develop a nationally consistent benthic habitat classification mode - Seamap Australia was founded with national stakeholders and colleagues. Vanessa is the Chair of the Scientific Steering Committee of Seamap Australia. She is responsible for the overall operational management of the platform, including overseeing the operational performance of the team, developing the science strategy for the data and managing the user committee feedback.
Professor Vanessa Lucieer's research contributes to two discipline areas: marine surveying (seafloor mapping) and marine remote sensing (underwater sensor applications) with the goal of advancing our understanding of marine communities and improving our ability to manage vulnerable environments. Through national and international collaborations Vanessa has bought different teams of people from various disciplines together to lead the development of novel methods to process acoustic and optical remote sensing data to map and characterise the seafloor. This information is used to understand the distribution of marine seafloor habitats, geomorphology and the links between marine ecology and the seafloor geomorphology in temperate and polar waters. Studying acoustic processing and spatial analysis in concert allows her to understand the uncertainties between data acquisition and data representation and their influences on the derived spatial products when used in ecological or geophysical modelling. Vanessa's research has been at the forefront of modelling uncertainty through marine spatial analysis and quantifying the impact that uncertainty has on spatial prediction models developed for managing Australia's marine park estate. Over the next 5 years she aims to extend the application of these methods to both national (Marine and Coastal Biodiversity Hub) and international (New Zealand Antarctic Science Plan and ACEAS) projects and train the next generation of seafloor mapping scientists.