Dataset

South Australia's Sea Lions as Ocean Observers (aggregated per 1-degree cell)

OBIS-SEAMAP Open in mapper Explore occurrences

Original provider: South Australian Research and Development Institute Dataset credits: Data provider: Fur seal, pelagic shark and seabird tracking; Originating data center: Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT); Project sponsor or sponsor description: South Australian Research and Development Institute Abstract: Over the next 3 summers, up to 40 Australian sea lion adult males will carry state-of-the-art satellite transmitters as they traverse some of southern Australia’s most remote and biologically-productive waters.This project is funded by the Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS - www.imos.org.au) through the Australian Acoustic Tagging and Monitoring System (AATAMS http://imos.org.au/aatams.html).The maritime expeditions of the Australian sea lions are now yielding data that are important to both biologists and oceanographers and refining our understanding of the intimate connections between the mechanics of the Earth’s oceans, and the complex ecosystems which dwell within and upon them. This is a truly interdisciplinary project, bringing together biologists studying living systems and oceanographers studying marine physics. The maritime expeditions of the Australian sea lions are now yielding data that are important to both biologists and oceanographers and refining our understanding of the intimate connections between the mechanics of the Earth’s oceans, and the complex ecosystems which dwell within and upon them. This is an extremely cost-effective means of adding to existing global oceanographic data archives. It has the potential to complement existing sampling methods, especially for regions from which data are scarce and where these alternative methods may be difficult or prohibitively expensive to implement. Importanly, this approach provides a mechanism of targeting the collection of physical oceanographic data from regions that are biologically of interest (ie. where high trophic level predators feed), therefore providing greater insights into how physical ocean processes underpin marine ecosystems and commercial fisheries. This dataset is a summarized representation of the telemetry locations aggregated per species per 1-degree cell.

Citation: Goldsworthy S. 2025. South Australia's Sea Lions as Ocean Observers. 1.0.0. Dataset published in OBIS-SEAMAP and originated from Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT; http://www.seaturtle.org/tracking/index.shtml?project_id=274). https://doi.org/10.82144/ef60b521.

Published: October 07, 2025 at 22:43

URL: http://ipt.env.duke.edu/resource?r=zd_448_1deg

Simon Goldsworthy
Fur seal, pelagic shark and seabird tracking

Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool
seaturtle.org

40
occurrence records
1
taxa
1
species

Taxa

Missing and invalid fields

Field Missing Invalid
maximumDepthInMeters 40
100.0%
minimumDepthInMeters 40
100.0%

Quality flags

The OBIS data quality flags are documented at https://github.com/iobis/obis-qc.

Flag Dropped Records
NO_DEPTH 40
100.0%
ON_LAND 11
27.5%

Measurement types

DNA derived data