Drone technology aids restoration, resilience of Native Hawaiian fishponds
Scientists and kiaʻi loko (fishpond practitioners) are using drone technology to aid their efforts to restore and ensure the resilience of Native Hawaiian fishponds.
Scientists and kiaʻi loko (fishpond practitioners) are using drone technology to aid their efforts to restore and ensure the resilience of Native Hawaiian fishponds.
These are among the findings of the U.S. National Climate Assessment, released by the Biden Administration which involved five UH Mānoa researchers.
The team depicted adaptation strategies in the years 2050 and 2100 for a beachfront study site at Fort Derussy U.S. Army Museum and Waikīkī Shore Condominium.
Associate Professor Christina Gerhardt returns to UH after serving as a visiting professor at Princeton University.
UH research “Envisioning Sea Level Rise Adaptation in Waikiki, Âé¶¹´«Ã½,” received an honorable mention at the AIA Honors and Design Awards.
The partnership will be managed by the UH Office of the Vice President for Research and Innovation.
The study surveyed 19 lineal descendants and resource managers.
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System is collaborating with partners in the Pacific Islands, the Pacific Northwest and Alaska.
This editorial by UH Mānoa Associate Dean Chip Fletcher was posted in The Hill on November 17, 2021.
U.S. homebuyers are taking the real estate impacts of climate change more seriously, according to UHERO.