Texas Integrated Ocean Observing System

The Texas Integrated Ocean Observing System (TIOOS) is a coalition of ocean observing systems in Texas currently consisting of the Texas Coastal Ocean Observation Network (TCOON) and the Texas Automated Buoy System (TABS).

TCOON Stations
TCOON/NOAA Stations
TABS Buoys

TIOOS Reports

TIOOS Plan

This website is funded with qualified outer continental shelf oil and gas revenues by the Coastal Impact Assistance Program, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, U.S. Department of the Interior.

Texas
Coastal
Ocean
Observation
Network

In 1989 the Conrad Blucher Institute for Surveying and Science (CBI) at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi commenced the installation of a modern state-of-the-art water-level measurement system along the Texas coast. The first measurement systems installed by CBI were intended to provide real-time water-level and meteorological information to the City of Corpus Christi to assist local officials with preparations for incoming hurricanes and tropical storms. From this initial work, other state agencies such as the Texas General Land Office and the Texas Water Development Board began contracting CBI to provide similar information for other areas along the Texas coast. Following a Texas Legislative mandate in 1991, this network of water level gauges became the Texas Coastal Ocean Observation Network (TCOON). As a result, TCOON expanded from an initial three stations in Corpus Christi in 1989 to over forty stations by 1992.

Texas
Automated
Buoy
System