Robots to fan out across world's oceans to monitor their health
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[April 21, 2021]
By Nathan Frandino
MOSS LANDING, California (Reuters) - After
years studying the icy waters of the Southern Ocean with floating
robotic monitors, a consortium of oceanographers and other researchers
is deploying them across the planet, from the north Pacific to the
Indian Ocean.
The project known as the Global Ocean Biogeochemistry Array, or GO-BGC,
started in March with the launch of the first of 500 new floating
robotic monitors containing computers, hydraulics, batteries and an
array of sensors scientists say will relay a more comprehensive picture
of the ocean and its health.
"The ocean is extremely important to the climate, to the sustainability
of the earth, its supply of food, protein to enormous numbers of people.
We don't monitor it very well," said Ken Johnson, GO-BGC's project
director and a senior scientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute (MBARI) in Moss Landing, California.
Johnson said the sensors help survey a larger portion of the ocean more
consistently than people collecting samples on ships, adding, "The goal
is to be able to monitor the health of the ocean in places where people
only go once a decade."
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The top of a robotic near-shore ocean float is seen floating in a
test tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss
Landing, California, U.S., March 9, 2021. Picture taken March 9,
2021. REUTERS/Nathan Frandino
At the MBARI lab, team members have been busy
calibrating each of the sensors, which will measure acidity, or pH
levels, salinity, temperature, pressure, oxygen and nitrate.
The measurements will be taken at a depth of 3,280 feet (1,000m),
where the float will drift in weaker currents for a little over a
week. The float will then descend to 6,500 feet before surfacing and
transmitting its data to shore via satellite. The entire trip will
take about 10 days.
That data will be made available to research institutions and
schools for free, and will help lead to better oceanic modelling,
said George Matsumoto, a senior education and research specialist at
MBARI.
"Over the years as all the data starts to accumulate, we're learning
more and more about the oceans," he said.
(Reporting by Nathan Frandino; Editing by Karishma Singh and Gerry
Doyle)
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