Estimated area occupied by walrus at coastal haulouts in Alaska and Russia
Detailed Description
This image shows the estimated area (in square meters) occupied by Pacific walrus at eight coastal haulouts in northern Alaska and Chukotka Russia in 2023 (walrus were detected at two haulouts in 2023: Point Lay, Alaska and Cape Serdtse Kamen, Chukotka). This dataset is derived from images in 2022 and 2023 from a variety of Earth observing satellite imagery sources collected at known walrus coastal haulouts in Alaska and Chukotka, Russia. Earth observing imagery sources used in this data release include (but are not limited to) optical imagery collections by: (1) the European Space Agency's Sentinel-2 mission, (2) the Plant Labs Planet Scope constellation, and (3) Maxar satellites, as well as synthetic aperture radar imagery collected by: (1) European Space Agency's Sentinel-1 mission, (2) the DLR (German Aerospace Agency) TerraSAR-X satellite, (3) the Umbra Space satellite constellation, (4) the Canadian Radarsat-2 satellite, (5) the Capella Space satellite constellation and (6) the Finnish Iceye constellation. The USGS data package at the link below provides: A) geospatial polygon outlines of walrus herds apparent to trained interpreters in satellite images; B) a table listing the satellite images examined that had clear views of the walrus coastal haulout study sites and the area of all walrus herds (if any were present) summarized from the geospatial polygon outlines of walrus herds apparent to trained interpreters, and C) maps (not available for all haulouts in all years) showing interpreted herd outlines superimposed on the satellite images.
USGS Data Release: Pacific Walrus coastal haulout occurrences interpreted from satellite imagery
Sources/Usage
Public Domain.
U.S. Geological Survey