UOG awarded $715K for research on aquifer and coral reef health

UOG awarded $715K for research on aquifer and coral reef health

UOG awarded $715K for research on aquifer and coral reef health


11/19/2021

This November, 91快播 will start a $715,014 project that will use unmanned aerial systems (UAS), remote sensing, and NASA technology to closely examine the Northern Guam Lens Aquifer, which supplies 90% of the island鈥檚 drinking water, and produce critical data and tools for resource management.

H氓nom Fresko yan Acho鈥 T氓si, which translates to 鈥淔reshwater and Coral,鈥 is a three-part project that will produce maps of coastal freshwater discharge, fine-tune variables needed to better estimate the aquifer鈥檚 water supply, and look for relationships between that freshwater discharge and coral reef health. 

Eliana Walker
Eliana Walker, research associate with the Water and Environmental Research Institute of the Western Pacific at the 91快播, prepares for a drone excursion. Unmanned aerial systems will be used in a $715,000 NASA Guam EPSCoR project to collect critical data on the Northern Guam Lens Aquifer, the island鈥檚 primary source of drinking water, and nearby coral reefs.
The project will be funded by a grant recently awarded through a NASA EPSCoR Cooperative Agreement Notice. The and the Micronesian Area Research Center will co-lead the project with collaborators from local and federal agencies.

鈥淔reshwater is the most basic requirement for the survival and prosperity of any community. And island communities must make do with what we can catch, store, and manage inside our own coastlines. Importing water via rivers or pipelines is not an option,鈥 said WERI Director and Chief Hydrologist John Jenson, who is serving as co-science investigator for the project. 鈥淲ater managers can use reliable estimates of coastal discharge to determine how much freshwater [remains and] can be sustainably pumped out of the Northern Guam Lens Aquifer.鈥

The research team will incorporate NASA technologies and methods in gathering ridge-to-reef data and in modeling the hydrologic processes in karst and non-karst landscapes.

鈥淏uilding on the work of the last two cooperative agreements with NASA, we are continuing to use UASes to expand our maps of aquifer discharge along the coast, to include the entire northern half of Guam,鈥 said Associate Professor Romina King, who leads the at UOG and is serving as the other science investigator on the project. 鈥淐oupled with high-resolution coral reef maps using NASA fluid lensing techniques, this will allow us to investigate if that coastal discharge potentially plays a role in coral reef health.鈥

A robust cyberinfrastructure hub will store, compute, and visualize the data collected from the aquifer along with complimentary data from partnering agencies. This database could be an important resource for ongoing and future research and water management decision support.

鈥淭his is an excellent example of how Guam can utilize NASA鈥檚 research opportunities to produce impactful data to better manage our natural resources,鈥 said UOG Associate Professor Leslie Camacho Aquino, executive director of the NASA Guam EPSCoR program at the university and the administrative principal investigator for the award.

The grant award will also allow for science-based trainings for students and capacity-building with scientists and managers from other agencies, Aquino said. 

鈥淭hese efforts all point toward a more holistic approach in maintaining our aquifer and coastal ecosystems,鈥 she said.

About the NASA EPSCoR program
The Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, or EPSCoR, creates partnerships with government, higher education, and industry that are designed to affect lasting improvements in a state or region鈥檚 infrastructure, research, and development capacity. The NASA EPSCoR program focuses on jurisdictions that have not participated equitably in competitive aerospace and aerospace-related research activities. NASA Guam EPSCoR is housed within UOG and is focused on research that aligns with NASA missions and/or technologies and is relevant to Guam and the region.