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2024 State of the Science Workshop

Taking an Ecosystem Approach: Integrating Offshore Wind, Wildlife, and Fisheries 

2024 State of the Science on

Offshore Wind Energy, Wildlife, and Fisheries

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The 2024 State of the Science, hosted by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) on behalf of the Environmental Technical Working Group (E-TWG) and the Fisheries Technical Working Group (F-TWG), was held at Stony Brook University on Long Island, New York from July 16-19, 2024.​

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Session Videos

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Summary Agenda

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Program and Book of Abstracts

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Side Meetings

Highlights

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The 2024 State of the Science Workshop assembled over

590 in-person and virtual stakeholders engaged with

environmental, wildlife, fisheries, and offshore wind                                                                       

energy research. The workshop included 14 symposia                                                                    sessions, 13 oral presentation and discussion sessions                                                                            (including 2 lightning talk sessions), and 57 posters.                                                                        Several side meetings and workshops were also held in                                                                  conjunction with the main conference.       

 

Presentations and discussions focused on the overarching

theme of the 2024 workshop, Taking an Ecosystem Approach: Integrating Offshore Wind, Wildlife, and Fisheries.

The goals of State of the Science Workshops are to:

  • Engage and inform interested stakeholders about the state of knowledge regarding wildlife and offshore wind energy development, including ongoing efforts to understand, minimize, and mitigate environmental impacts

  • Promote regional coordination by sharing updates on research studies, guidelines development, and other efforts in the eastern U.S. and elsewhere

  • Promote collaboration through expert information exchange and discussion

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Workshop Sessions

Anchor 1

Scientific Program

Terms of Use for Video Links

Links to videos for each workshop session are provided below where available. These presentation files are provided for personal edification only, and should not be cited without contacting the author(s) directly.

Tuesday, July 16th
Welcome and Keynote Address

Video Link

Moderator: Kate McClellan Press, NYSERDA;
Kate Williams, Biodiversity Research Institute

Welcome and Introductory Presentations 
Harry B. Wallace, Chief of the Unkechaug Indian Nation; Sandi Brewster-Walker, Executive Director & Government Affairs Officer of the Montaukett Indian Nation; Kate McClellan Press, State of the Science Organizing and Scientific Committees, NYSERDA; Gregory Lampman, Offshore Wind Director, NYSERDA;  Doreen Harris, President and CEO, NYSERDA

Keynote Presentation 
Climate Change and the Continental Shelf and Slope: Forcing, Ocean
Processes, and Impacts
– Glen Gawarkiewicz, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution

Session 1 Symposium: Regional Wildlife Science Collaborative
Science Plan Implementation in 2024 and Beyond

Video Link

Moderator:
Emily Shumchenia, RWSC

Organizers: Emily Shumchenia, Christian Laspada, RWSC

Introduction – Emily Shumchenia, RWSC

Regional long term archival passive acoustic monitoring coordination and
standardization
– Debbie Brill, RWSC

Urgent data collection needs for sea turtles – Sue Barco, RWSC

Acoustic telemetry coordination among RWSC, ROSA, and ACT – Jordan
Katz, RWSC

Regional bird and bat monitoring coordination – Samantha Coccia-Schillo, RWSC

Synthesizing oceanographic and seafloor habitat data to create a regional
picture
– Nikelene Mclean, RWSC

Session 2 Symposium: Offshore Wind Fisheries Monitoring Plan Development, Implementation, and Evolution Discussion Session

Video Link

Moderators: Reneé Reilly and Mike Pol, ROSA

Organizers: Reneé Reilly and Mike Pol, ROSA

The Responsible Offshore Science Alliance (ROSA) has held a series of coordination
sessions to discuss the development, implementation, and evolution of offshore
wind fisheries monitoring plans to characterize challenges and solutions, and to
understand what role ROSA could play to best serve the community as it develops
regional monitoring strategies. This symposium will offer the opportunity for a
discussion of the outcomes across sectors, including offshore wind developers,
regulators, researchers, and fishing industry representatives

Session 3 Symposium: Project WOW: Update on Project Results and Plans

Video Link

Moderator:
Douglas Nowacek, Duke University 

Organizers: Douglas Nowacek, Duke University; Kate Williams, Biodiversity Research Institute; Howard Rosenbaum, Wildlife Conservation Society; Xiaoqin Zang, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory;  Susan Parks, Syracuse University 

Overview presentation – Douglas Nowacek

Q&A and panel discussion

Session 4 Plenary Presentation: Engaging the Fishing Community
to Improve Marine Science

Video Link 

Moderator:
Ursula Howson, BOEM

Engaging the Fishing Community to Improve Marine Science - David Bethoney, Commercial Fisheries Research Foundation

Session 5 Symposium: Lessons Learned from Collaborative Effects to Develop Fisheries and Benthic Monitoring Plans for Offshore Wind Farms

Video Link

Moderator:
Jennifer Dupont, Equinor

Organizers: Brian Gervelis, INSPIRE Environmental, and Jennifer Dupont, Equinor

Addressing the challenges and realities of developing and executing Fisheries and
Benthic Monitoring Plans that are aligned with the 2019 BOEM recommendations for renewable energy development.

 

How survey designs influence study outcomes – Dara Wilber, INSPIRE Environmental

Requirements and challenges when surveying benthic habitats
and introduced hard structures
– Annie Murphy, INSPIRE Environmental 

Challenges and recommendations for fisheries monitoring for
offshore wind farms
– Sarah Borsetti, Rutgers University 

Rhode Island state perspectives on fisheries and benthic
monitoring
– Julia Livermore, Rhode Island Division of Marine Fisheries 

Challenges and solutions in executing monitoring plans – Dave Bethoney, 
Commercial Fisheries Research Foundation

Panel Discussion

Session 6 Oral Presentations: Birds and Bats - Key Research Needs and Ongoing Activities 
Video Link

Moderator:
Kate Williams, Biodiversity Research Institute

Synthetic analysis of post-construction displacement of marine birds from
wind energy areas – Juliet Lamb, The Nature Conservancy 


Interannual variation in bird species, abundance, and activity at offshore wind farms – Greg Forcey, Normandeau Associates 

GPS tracking of Maine’s seabirds indicates varied exposure to forthcoming offshore wind development – Dan Lyons, National Audubon Society 


Application of spatial models of marine bird distributions to inform offshore wind energy development – Arliss Winship, NOAA

Regional assessment of offshore wind impacts on Aerofauna in Canada – Paul Knaga, Environment and Climate Change Canada

Wednesday, July 17th
Sessions 7 Oral Presentations: Hydrodynamics and Ecosystem Linkages
Video Link

Moderator:
Grace Chang, Integral Consulting 

From wind to whales: potential hydrodynamic impacts of offshore wind on Nantucket Shoals region ecosystems – Kaustubha Raghukumar, Integral Consulting

Ecosystem effects of large-scale implementation of offshore wind in the North Sea – Luca van Duren, Deltares

Integrating offshore wind, wildlife, and fish: the “Predators and Prey Around Renewable Energy Developments (PrePARED) Projects – Cormac Booth, SMRU Consulting 

Streamlining integration and distribution of metocean data from offshore wind operations for marine stakeholders – Tom Shyka, NERACOOS

Assessing the role of ocean currents on prey concentration from hourly to seasonal scales – Jacquelyn Veatch, Rutgers University 

Session 8 Symposium: The Continued Role of Acoustics in Marine
Life Monitoring and Mitigation for the Offshore Wind Industry

Video Link

Moderators:

Sharon Whitesell, Ariana Spawn, Orsted

Organizers: Sharon Whitesell and Ariana Spawn, Orsted


Examination of acoustic monitoring techniques and applications currently being
used, with a discussion on successes and challenges to using these methods.


ECO-Gliders: An autonomous oceanographic and ecological mission to inform
offshore wind development
– Josh Kohut, Rutgers University 


Active acoustic technologies for monitoring fish and zooplankton abundance,
distribution, and behavior. What can fancy fish finders really do?
– Joe Warren, Stony Brook University 


Observations of the use of arrays for passive acoustic monitoring of vocalizing
baleen whales
– Vince Premus, ThayerMahan


insight into the acoustic behavior of large whales: one acoustic tag at a time
– Susan Parks, Syracuse University 


Panel Discussion

Sessions 9 Oral Presentations: Ecosystem Linkages and Forecasting 

Video Link

Moderator:

Laura Morse, JASCO

Investigating prey fields near foraging right whales in and adjacent to the
southern New England wind areas
– Christopher Orphanides, NOAA


Multi-decadal changes in seabird and forage fish distributions in the
Northwest Atlantic
– Evan Adams, Biodiversity Research Institute


Modeling distribution shifts of small odontocetes in the Northeast United
States
– Nathan Hirtle, Stony Brook University 


Subseasonal forecasts as a powerful tool for dynamic mammal monitoring
and management
– Julia Stepanuk, Biodiversity Research Institute


Near real-time North Atlantic right whale density model – Jason Roberts, Duke University 

Sessions 10 Symposium: The Use of Acoustic Telemetry for Monitoring the Effects of Offshore Wind Development Along the U.S. East Coast 

Video Link

Moderators:

Chris Sarro, Greg DeCelles, Orsted

​Organizers: Chris Sarro and Greg DeCelles, Orsted 


This symposium will highlight how acoustic telemetry is being used to monitor
changes in behavior, distribution and movement of marine fish and invertebrate
species in response to offshore development.


Session introduction with general overview of acoustic telemetry – Chris
Sarro/Greg DeCelles


Evaluating space use of elasmobranchs before offshore wind farm
infrastructure installation
– Bradley Peterson, Stony Brook University 


Utilization of acoustic telemetry as a regional non-extractive approach for
monitoring protected, prohibited, and commercially/recreationally important
fishes within Offshore Wind Lease Areas within the Mid-Atlantic Bigh
t – Keith
Dunton, Monmouth University 


Evaluating the performance of a fine-scale acoustic positioning system to
monitor fish behavior along the Ørsted South Fork Wind Farm subsea cable
route
– Michael Frisk, Stony Brook University 


Tracking the Fine-Scale Movements of Horseshoe Crab (Limulus polyphemus)
and American Lobster (Homarus americanus) at a Wind Farm Export Cable
Site with Acoustic Telemetry
– Matthew Sclafani, Cornell University 

 

Using acoustic telemetry to assess interactions between offshore wind
development and cod spawning on Cox Ledge
– Ali Frey, University of Massachusettes Darmouth

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Go with the flow: Creating and maintaining a developer-funded acoustic
telemetry monitoring framework in southern New England
– Connor
Capizzano, INSPIRE Environmental 

Sessions 11 Symposium: New York, New York: The Interface Between Science & Offshore Wind Policy in a Dynamic Ecosystem

Video Link

Moderator:

Howard Rosenbaum, Wildlife Conservation Society

​Organizers: Howard Rosenbaum, Wildlife Conservation Society and Jennifer Dupont, Equinor 


This symposium provides targeted project results for small and large cetaceans and
includes a discussion on how collaboration between researched and developers has
improved the use of our science.


Setting the stage: An overview of our research and the interface of science with
policy/best practices
– Howard Rosenbaum, Wildlife Conservation Society 


A deeper dive: Seasonal occurrence of four large whale species from 2016-
2024 in the Empire Wind area; moving beyond detection of single cell types for
large whales to increase detection probability
– Melinda Rekdahl, Carissa King-Nolan, Wildlife Conservation Society 


Evaluating the efficacy of real-time passive acoustic monitoring near offshore
wind energy development activities to help mitigate risks to North Atlantic
right whales
– Mark Baumgartner, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute


Tying it all together: What do these findings mean for policy and best practice
around development activities?
– Jennifer Dupont, Equinor


Panel Discussion

Session 12 Symposium: Bats and Offshore Wind: Addressing Three Critical Needs for Effective Management
Video Link

Anchor 1

Moderator:
Nate Fuller

Organizers: Nate Fuller, USWFS, Jeff Clerc, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and Laura Dempsey, National Renewable Energy Laboratory 

This session will focus on three broad categories of critical research needs: natural history, anthropogenic effects, and minimization, with the goal to address the current state of the science for each category.

 

Talks from:

Nate Fuller, USWFS
Laura Dempsey, National Renewable Energy Laboratory 
Michael Whitby, Bat Conservation International 

Q&A and panel discussion will also include Cris Hein, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Session 13: Lightning Talks
Video Link

Moderator:
Brian Dresser, Tetra Tech

Ecological innovations in Dutch offshore wind farm projects: a case study of Shell’s contributions – Candice Cook-Ohryn, Shell Energy 

Engineering offshore wind farms to promote nature development – Remment ter Hofstede, Van Oord DMC

Evaluating potential commercial fishing impacts in Attentive Energy One’s lease area – Matthew Bingham, Veritas Economics 

Pre-construction monitoring of hydrography, copepods, other zooplankton, fish, and other nekton at the Sunrise Wind lease area – Joe Warren, Stony Brook University 

Sampling offshore bat activity with an unscrewed surface vehicle – Michael Whitby, Bat Conservation International  

Modeling uncertainty in Great black-backed gull movement in order to accurately quantify risk to offshore wind – Esther Nosazeogie, Stony Brook University 

Session 14 Symposium: Perspectives on Collison Risk Models

Video Link

Moderator:
Evan Adams, Biodiversity Research Institute

Organizers: Evan Adams, Andrew Gilbert, Holly Goyert, Kate Williams, Biodiversity Research Institute; Aonghais Cook, The Biodiversity Consultancy; Pamela Loring, USFWS


This symposium will compare approaches for using Collision Risk Models (CRMs) in several jurisdictions (United States, United Kingdom, and Australia).

Review of types of collision risk models currently in use around the world – Aonghais Cook, The Biodiversity Consultancy

The regulatory context of collision model usage in the United Kingdom – Julie Miller, The Scottish Government 

The United States regulatory use of collision risk models – Stephanie Vail-Muse, USFWS

Using movement data to inform collision risk models for endangered species in the U.S. Atlantic  – Andrew Gilbert, Biodiversity Research Institute

New types of collision risk models implemented in Australia – Elizabeth Stark, Symbolix

Panel Discussion

Session 15: Lighting Talks

Video Link

Moderator:
Howard Rosenbaum, Wildlife Conservation Society 

Evaluating the environmental performance of a newly designed ecological scour protection unit – Yaeli Rosenberg, ECOncrete

A framework for monitoring ecosystem effects and impacts to ocean users of floating offshore wind infrastructure – Casey Yanos, Maine Department of Marine Resources 

Application of hydrodynamic and agent-based modeling techniques in the New York Bight – Sarah Courbis, Worley Consulting 

Enhancing precision in environmental impact assessments: a comparative analysis of LiDAR with alternative methods for assessing collision risk for offshore wind – Cameron Bullen, APEM Ltd.

Collating acoustic and visual data for assessing humpback whale presence in the New York Bight: a case study – Sarah Trabue, Wildlife Conservation Society 

Drone-based photogrammetry reveals differences in humpback whale body condition across North Atlantic foraging grounds – Chelsi Napoli, Stony Brook University 

Evaluating drivers of recent large whale strandings on the US east coast – Lesley Thorne, Stony Brook University 

Session 16 Symposium: Implementing a Bird and Bat Tracking Research Framework with the Regional Wildlife Science Collaborative for Offshore Wind

Video Link 

Moderator:
Pamela Loring, USFWS

Organizers: Pam Loring and Nate Fuller, USFWS

This symposium will provide a forum for information sharing and facilitated discussions of current progress and objectives.

 

Talks from:

Pamela Loring, USFWS
Nate Fuller, USFWS
Autumn-Lynn Harrison, Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center
Patrick Roberts, USFWS

Thursday, July 18th

Session 17: Plenary Speaker

Video Link

Moderator:
Morgan Brunbauer, NYSERDA

Best practices regarding Indigenous engagement within the offshore wind industry - Lucas Shumaker and Kelsey Leonard, University of Waterloo

Session 18 Oral Presentations: Wildlife Survey Design and Analysis
Video Link

Moderator:
Juliet Lamb, The Nature Conservancy

A comparison of visual and image aerial surveys for marine mammals and sea turtles in the New York Offshore Planning Area – Debra Palka, NOAA

A novel approach to account for availability bias when estimating porpoise abundance from digital video aerial surveys – Kelly Macleod, HiDef Aerial Surveying

Application of a Bayesian hierarchical density surface model to estimate seasonal abundance of large whales in wind energy areas off the east coast – Doug Sigourney, NOAA

Guidance for detecting changes in marine bird distributions and habitat use related to offshore wind development in the United States – Kate Williams, Biodiversity Research Institute 

Assessing study design options for post-construction avian displacement in the New York Bight – Julia Stepanuk, Biodiversity Research Institute 

Session 19 Symposium: Building Sustainable Offshore Wind Futures Through Collaborative Research Programs
Video Link

Moderator:
Ivan Savitsky, The Carbon Trust

Organizer: Olivia Burke, The Carbon Trust

A panel of experts will explore the concept of collaborative programs in practice (case study presentations) and discuss how these programs are coordinating and collectively driving meaningful interactions between offshore developers and other co-uses of marine space.


Introduction – Ivan Savitsky, The Carbon Trust 

Cross-border collaboration – Ivan Savitsky, The Carbon Trust

Supporting the organized delivery of funding – Emily Shumchenia, RWSC 

A model to bring diverse ocean users and stakeholders, including communities, private and public sector together – Katy Bland, NERACOOS

Expert support to build a strong and future-proof industry – Julia Dombrowski, National Offshore Wind Research & Development Consortium

Efficiently addressing community concerns – Mike Pol, ROSA

Sessions 20 Oral Presentations: Changes to Fisheries and Ecosystems
Video Link

Moderator:

Brendan Runde, The Nature Conservancy

Characterizing the offshore wind farm impacts on NOAA fisheries survey data quality for key Mid-Atlantic fisheries – Ming Sun, Stony Brook University 

60 years of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center bottom trawl survey: maintaining a long-running series in the face of growing uncertainty – Catherine Foley, NOAA

Evaluating potential recreational fishing impacts in Attentive Energy One’s lease area – Jason Kinnell, Veritas Economics 

Modeling interactions among commercial shellfish fishing in wind energy by using a stakeholder-informed agent-based approach – Daphne Munroe, Rutgers University 

Regional compensation for fisheries: a new approach to mitigation – Kris Ohleth, Special Initiative on Offshore Wind

Sessions 21 Symposium: Progression Towards an Integrated Ecosystem-based Approach to Assessing Environmental Impacts of Offshore Energy Development

Video Link

Moderator:

Kristen Strellec, BOEM

Organizers: Jacob Levenson, Jennifer Bosyk, and Stephanie Webb, BOEM

 

A panel of experts from various institutions to share developments in the available modeling tools used in forecasting available environmental impacts.
 

Talks from:

Jacob Levenson, BOEM
Andrew Lipsky, NOAA
Howard Townsend, NOAA
Ethan Deyle, Boston University 

Beth Fulton, CSIRO

Friday, July 19th

Session 22 Oral Presentations: Mitigation Approaches for Wildlife and Fisheries

Video Link

Moderators:

Carl LoBue, The Nature Conservancy 

Acoustic and environmental monitoring during turbine installation at South Fork Wind Farm – Arthur Newhall, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 

Scale model testing of biodiversity enhancing scour protections for offshore wind foundations and cables – Stendert Laan, Deltares 

Designing offshore wind pile driving to minimize Level A take estimates – Cormac Booth, SMRU Consulting 

Session 23 Symposium: State of the Policy: Building an Enabling Environment to Support the Delivery of Biodiversity Positive Outcomes Requires the Interface of Science and Policy

Video Link

Moderator:

Tricia Jedele, The Nature Conservancy 

A forum to synthesize net positive impact (NPI) related from other State of the Science symposia, to support the interface of science and policy by discussing how the policies that are unfolding support NPI objectives and discuss how spatial tools might be used to verify the identification of priority species and habitats. Brief presentations and panel discussion with:

Tricia Jedele, The Nature Conservancy 
Shayna Steingard, National Wildlife Federation
Kate McClellan Press, NYSERDA
Anthony Dvarskas, Orsted
Joel Southall, RWE
Marta Ribera, The Nature Conservancy 
Emily Shumchenia, RWSC 

Session 24 Oral Presentations: New Technologies
View Link

Anchor 1

Moderator:
Colleen Brust, NJ Marine Resources Adminstration

Using autonomous gliders to understand patterns and drivers of habitat use for baleen whales in the New York Bight – Katherine Gallagher, Stony Brook University 

Integration of non-extractive environmental DNA in monitoring potential impacts of offshore wind development – Jason Adolf, Monmouth University 

Machine learning and high performance computing for the detection and classification of marine wildlife in digital aerial imagery – Kyle Landolt, USGS

Technology gaps for monitoring birds and marine mammals at offshore wind facilities – Sarah Courbis, Worley Consulting 

Marine Observer: Empire Wind case study of long wave infrared camera vessel deployment to detect large whales – Audrey Bard, Equinor 

Exploring eDNA as a non-extractive technique for long-term monitoring of marine communities in offshore wind developments – Carmen Bernett, Invenergy

Session 25 Symposium: State of the Science: The Applications of Compensatory Mitigation and Voluntary Conservation Measures to Achieve No Net Loss or Net Gain to Birds Impacted by Offshore Wind Energy Projects
Video Link

Moderator:
Holly Goyert, Biodiversity Research Institute

Organizers: Holly Goyert, Kate Williams, Wing Goodale, Evan Adams, Biodiversity Research Institute; Kim Peters,  Orsted; Scott Johnston, USFWS, and Caleb Spiegel, USFWS.


This symposium aims to identify existing research efforts that integrate impact assessment with compensatory mitigation and/or voluntary offsets.

Introduction – Holly Goyert, Biodiversity Research Insitute 

USFWS approaches to compensatory mitigation, and considerations on net gain strategies –Scott Johnston, USFWS

Conceptual overview of the methods available to quantify compensation – Aspen Ellis, University of California Santa Cruz

Applications of identifying offsite offsets and acceptable levels of impact from collision with onshore wind energy in emerging markets – Aonghais Cook (presenting for Dave Wilson), The Biodiversity Consultancy 

Habitat and resource equivalency analyses as potential approaches for net-positive biodiversity estimation – Anthony Dvarskas, Orsted

Research to underpin policies designed to offset impacts from offshore wind and achieve net gain in the UK – Kate Searle, UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology 

Session 26 Discussion: Compensatory Mitigation & Biodiversity Positive Approaches in the Marine Environment

Video Link

Moderator:
Holly Goyert, Biodiversity Research Insitute; Tricia Jedele, The Nature Conservancy 

​Facilitated panel discussion on the state of the science and policy on compensatory mitigation and biodiversity positive approaches in the marine environment (continuation of Sessions 23 and 25)

Photo credits: Banner offshore wind farm © Nicholas Doherty; Loggerhead sea turtle © Kate Sutherland; Whale and birds © Humberto Braojos; Benthic habitat Â© Arhnue Tan; Offshore wind farm Â© Chuyuss

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