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Major boost for oceanic research as Challenger 150 joins forces with Seabed 2030

07 June 2024

Coinciding with World Oceans Day (8th June 2024), two major international marine initiatives have announced the signing of a landmark agreement to work together on ocean research and exploration.

Courtesy of the NERC funded Deep Links Project – Plymouth University, Oxford University, BGS, JNCC

Challenger 150 – which coordinates a global effort to map life in the deep-sea – has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with The Nippon Foundation-GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project, a global initiative dedicated to inspiring and coordinating the global effort to map the entire ocean floor by the end of the decade. Consolidating the physical and biological ocean data being identified and produced by the two separate initiatives will greatly advance our understanding of the ocean.

A collaborative project between The Nippon Foundation and the General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans (GEBCO), Seabed 2030 is officially recognised as a flagship programme of the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030), with its mission actively supporting UN Sustainable Development Goal 14: to conserve and sustainably use the ocean, seas and marine resources for sustainable development.

Meanwhile, Challenger 150 is a global scientific cooperative under the Deep Ocean Stewardship Initiative (DOSI), developed to respond to the needs of the Ocean Decade, building capacity for global deep-sea research, expanding biological observations and the understanding of deep-sea ecosystems, and supporting their sustainable management.

Professor Kerry Howell, Deep-Sea Ecologist at Plymouth Marine Laboratory (PML) and Co-lead of the Challenger 150 programme, explains:

“From mapping unexplored seamounts in the South Atlantic to venturing under the Arctic ice to study hydrothermal vents, Challenger 150 is rapidly expanding our observational frontiers.”

“The increasing use of autonomous and robotic technology in ocean science and exploration is set to rapidly increase both the rate of collection and coverage (temporal and spatial) of observations made in the world’s ocean over the next decade and will help provide the transformative understanding required to better manage our oceans”.

Dr Ana Hilario, Deep-Sea Ecologist at University of Aveiro and fellow Co-lead of the Challenger 150 programme, continues:

“By combining the high-resolution bathymetric data compiled by initiatives like Seabed 2030 with our own, we can produce unprecedented ecosystem maps and predictive habitat models. This is incredibly exciting as it means we can fill the big holes in our knowledge of the deep sea and help us better target where to look for key ecosystems. The collaboration will also help us produce a ‘digital twin’ of the ocean so we can better understand the impacts of climate change and human use”.

The pairing of the two initiatives evokes the spirit of the historic HMS Challenger mission which undertook a ground-breaking research voyage between 1872 and 1876 in an attempt to map the ocean floor, and the life inhabiting it. The pioneering expedition (after which the space shuttle Challenger and Challenger 150 were both named) mapped the shape of the ocean floor using a lead line lowered from the vessel to the sea floor. The depth of the ocean was calculated from the length of line let out and these point observations or “soundings’ were smoothed together to produce a basic seabed map.

By contrast, today’s seafloor mapping is achieved using advanced echo-sounder based technology in which multiple beams of sound are transmitted at the seabed to provide an image of shape of the seafloor.

Jamie McMichael-Phillips, Director of Seabed 2030, said:

“With almost a quarter of the world’s ocean floor currently mapped, there remain vast areas about which we know very little. It’s through our partnerships, including this with Challenger 150, that Seabed 2030 is able to make great strides towards the ambitious goal of achieving a fully mapped ocean.”

“Working alongside Challenger 150 will help foster even greater links between the global scientific community and wider industry, and I’m incredibly excited about the prospect of what we can achieve together in support of a sustainable ocean future”.

All data collected and shared with the Seabed 2030 project is included in the free and publicly available GEBCO global grid.

Case study: Seabed mapping in action

Recent research under the Challenger 150 Programme using the type of data compiled by both Seabed 2030 and Challenger 150 has led to the development of the most comprehensive map to date of the UK and Ireland’s cold water coral reefs.

An international team used high resolution multibeam echosounder and robot derived video observations to develop mathematical models of where coral reefs should be present in the UK and Ireland’s marine territories.

These models were then used to create maps of reef distribution throughout the UK and Ireland. After five years of collecting data to test these maps, the study, published last month in Marine Ecology Progress Series, found them to be over 75% accurate. Cold water coral reefs are an important habitat for many species, as well as a resource for storing carbon and supporting fisheries.

Understanding how important ecosystems like this are distributed throughout the world’s ocean is key to sustainable use and development.

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