Diary #37

Virginia Coastal Reserve LTER - Preliminary Meetings

Oyster, Virginia, is on the eastern shore, north of Chesapeake Bay. To the east, over a few miles of sea and sandbar, is a range of islands, including Hog Island and Cobb Island. A few more islands north you'll find Chincoteague Island, the home of very famous multicolored ponies.

The VCR LTER (Virginia Coastal Reserve/Long-term Ecological Research site) is currently headquartered in a rented farmhouse in Oyster. The Nature Conservancy owns the farmhouse, as well as Hog Island. A grant from the Anheuser-Busch corporation is funding an eventual relocation of their facility, which must be borne in mind as we plan this project. PI's for the LTER are Dr. John Porter and Dr. Bruce Hayden, both based in Charlottesville at the University of Virginia.

Hog Island and LTER Area

My first visit to Oyster, VA was on September 4, 2001, to meet with Randy Carlson, Project Site Manager, for a tour and a discussion of the current data gathering situation, as well as plans/dreams for future use of wireless technologies. Also present were Phil Smith, Marine Scientist; and Jason Restien, the site's newest employee.

I was given a tour of Hog Island, concentrating on its south end at Broadwater Tower.

Broadwater Tower, dwarfing the island's skyline

Interestingly, most or all of Hog Island is reachable by digital cell phone. This may provide some alternative networking opportunities as the project proceeds.

One "obvious" job would be to convert the current Meteorological stations ("Met stations") to a wireless format, reducing the need to visit the islands just to upload weather data -- a half- or all-day affair. The met data is generally used on a historical basis, though, and so there are questions as to how valuable that upgrade would be at the VCR/LTER.

A task they would like to achieve wirelessly is live monitoring of tidal data. In addition to its scientific value, live tidal data would help the efficient use of boats on the islands. Due to shallow waters between the mainland and the islands, tides have a huge effect on navigation, often requiring an additional worker to remain in the boat at all times lest that boat become stuck. Live access to tidal information would thus provide an early warning system for boat people. So, the use of wireless data here is in some ways more a support tool than an example of actual "scientific data."

A Tidal/Meteorological Data station on the Mainland

Another wireless task that was brainstormed at the meeting was the use of a web cam (live camera over the Internet). And how about an 802.11 cloud for the island and surrounding waters for use with laptops? If this is possible, then scientists could get live weather radar while on the island (or on a boat), again enabling them to time their travel.

To summarize, the staff members of the VCR/LTER have indicated that their goal is no less than an Internet cloud on Hog Island, preferably with sufficient bandwidth to facilitate live video.

Second Meeting

On Monday, October 8, I met in with the PI's (Doctors Porter and Hayden) at UVA in Charlottesville, VA. They also expressed a desire for high bandwidth Internet at the VCR LTER. Their Big Push was for video.

One scenario they presented: Upon finding a bird's nest on Hog Island, a researcher might set up a "webcam on a stick." Think in terms of camera plus radio plus power on a tomato stake. The researcher plants the camera there. Goes away. Are we there to watch cute little baby birds hatch? Not necessarily. Instead, the object is to observe when raccoons come to rob the nest. If there is a human there, the 'coons will stay away, so human presence would skew the data. Predation studies are darned difficult to do with people nearby, despite the way it looks on The Learning Channel. The ability to set up an unattended live camera (preferably anywhere/anytime on the island) would advance the way science is done at the VCR/LTER.

Another thing they want to do with video is extend their current collegiate distance education efforts. John Porter has taught students simultaneously in Virginia and Europe; some units of the course involve(d) work done at the VCR/LTER, and could be taught more effectively in the future if there were live data and live video available from Oyster.

Challenges

The first challenge is that of distance. It is some 15 miles from the lab in Oyster to Broadwater Tower, and another 10 miles from there to the Machipongo station. Standard, off-the-shelf wireless Internet equipment is designed to have an operating range measured in feet, not miles. Thus, even if we can get Internet to the ends of the island, there is no guarantee that the scientists will be able to use it with standard gear.

The second challenge is bandwidth. Data loggers typically only need a few bytes per second (over time) to do their jobs. Still photographs have orders of magnitude more data, and moving pictures yet another tenfold or greater increase. It will be interesting to see how fast we need to move the data, versus how fast we can move it, over these distances.

On our next few adventures in Oyster we will test a variety of radios' ability to reach Broadwater Tower.

 
Tom Williams

Special Assistant

NSF Wireless Field Tests

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