NOAA Magazine NOAA Home Page


NOAA TRACKS EXPLORATION OF REMARKABLE DEEP-SEA MOUNTAIN

May 16, 2002 — Biologically rich deep-sea mountains called "seamounts" have long been known to science. The waters around seamounts are incredibly productive—feeding grounds for everything from fish to sharks, albatrosses and sperm whales. They may be home to vast fields of sponges and forests of centuries-old corals, deep-water relatives of the tropical corals. But by and large, little is known about what lives on the slopes of these ancient undersea volcanoes.

Beginning Friday, May 17, the secrets of one seamount will be revealed. A team of researchers from four marine science institutions will explore the Davidson Seamount 1,300 meters (4,000 feet) below the ocean's surface off California's Big Sur coast, just outside NOAA's Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. The public can share their daily discoveries through a NOAA Web site. The expedition continues through Friday, May 24.

Based on a preliminary survey of the seamount conducted in May 2000 by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, scientists expect both biological and geological surprises. They will use a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) to take their closest look ever at the 2,300-meter (7,874-foot) high underwater mountain—the first deep-sea feature to be formally categorized as a seamount.

The expedition will use MBARI's research ship, the Western Flyer, and its state-of-the-art ROV Tiburon, a robotic submersible that can dive 4,000 meters (13,000 feet) below the ocean's surface. In addition to MBARI researchers, the expedition team will include scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium, Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and Moss Landing Marine Labs.

The team will travel 120 kilometers (75 miles) southwest of Monterey to study the Davidson Seamount. Headed by chief scientist Dr. Andrew De Vogelaere, research coordinator for the Monterey National Marine Sanctuary, the explorers will be an interdisciplinary team including geologists, marine biologists, educators and resource managers, with a wide range of expertise.

They will study the living creatures found on and around the seamount, taking geological samples and mapping the 40-kilometer (25-mile) long seamount.

What they discover will be available to the public daily on NOAA's Ocean Explorer Web site. Photos, video clips and diary entries by the scientists will be posted there. Visitors to the Web site will also have opportunities to e-mail questions about the work for the scientists to answer.

"Seamounts are biological hot-spots in the world's oceans," De Vogelaere said. "Because they're distant from shore and in deep water, they haven't been heavily exploited—yet. We're eager to bring new scientific tools to the project, and to use the Web site to reach the public as we're making discoveries about this unique and special place."

Explorers will expand on the video surveys of bottom communities made earlier by MBARI, collecting biological samples of seafloor organisms, and conducting surveys of fish, seabird and marine mammal populations around the seamount. If possible, they will also use special darts to collect tissue samples from passing sperm whales for genetic studies to understand broader population patterns among these marine mammals.

Background photos, maps and video clips from the 2000 expedition are available through the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.

For additional information about the expedition and the Web site, contact
Andrew De Vogelaere, research coordinator, NOAA's Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, (831) 647-4213.

Relevant Web Sites
NOAA's Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary

NOAA's Ocean Explorer

Davidson Seamount


Media Contact:
Jana Goldman, NOAA Research, (301) 713-2483

 

-end-





This article comes from Science Blog. Copyright � 2004
http://www.scienceblog.com/community

Archives J