A Method for siting and prioritizing the removal of derelict vessels in Florida Coastal Waters: test applications in the Florida Keys


Autoria(s): Antonini, Gustav A.; Ryder, R.; Garretson, C.
Data(s)

1989

Resumo

Increased boating activities and new waterfront developments have contributed an estimated 3,000 dismantled, abandoned, junked, wrecked, derelict vessels to Florida coastal waters. This report outlines a method of siting and prioritizing derelict vessel removal using the Florida Keys as a test area. The data base was information on 240 vessels, obtained from Florida Marine Patrol files. Vessel location was plotted on 1:250,000 regional and 1:5,000 and 1:12,000 site maps. Type of vessel, length, hull material, engine, fuel tanks, overall condition, afloat and submerged characteristics, and accessibility, were used to derive parametric site indices of removal priority and removal difficulty. Results indicate 59 top priority cases which should be the focus of immediate clean up efforts in the Florida Keys. Half of these cases are rated low to moderate in removal difficulty; the remainder are difficult to remove. Removal difficulty is a surrogate for removal cost: low difficulty -low cost, high difficulty - high cost. The rating scheme offers coastal planners options of focusing removal operations either on (1) specific areas with clusters of high priority derelict vessels or on (2) selected targeted derelicts at various, specific locations. (PDF has 59 pages.)

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/1853/1/flsgpt89003.pdf

Antonini, Gustav A. and Ryder, R. and Garretson, C. (1989) A Method for siting and prioritizing the removal of derelict vessels in Florida Coastal Waters: test applications in the Florida Keys. Gainesville, FL, Florida Sea Grant College Program, (Technical Paper - Florida Sea Grant College Program, 56)

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Florida Sea Grant College Program

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/1853/

Palavras-Chave #Management #Oceanography
Tipo

Monograph or Serial Issue

NonPeerReviewed