WATER WORLD
Animals could help humans monitor oceans
by Staff Writers
Exeter UK (SPX) Nov 28, 2019

Sea turtle equipped with an animal-borne sensor

Sharks, penguins, turtles and other seagoing species could help humans monitor the oceans by transmitting oceanographic information from electronic tags.

Thousands of marine animals are tagged for a variety of research and conservation purposes, but at present the information gathered isn't widely used to track climate change and other shifts in the oceans.

Instead, monitoring is mostly done by research vessels, underwater drones and thousands of floating sensors that drift with the currents. However, large areas of the ocean still remain under-sampled - leaving gaps in our knowledge.

A team led by the University of Exeter says animals carrying sensors can fill many of these gaps through natural behaviour such as diving under ice, swimming in shallow water or moving against currents.

"We want to highlight the massive potential of animal-borne sensors to teach us about the oceans," said lead author Dr David March, of Centre for Ecology and Conservation on Exeter's Penryn Campus in Cornwall.

"This is already happening on a limited scale, but there's scope for much more.

"We looked at 183 species - including tuna, sharks, rays, whales and flying seabirds - and the areas they are known to inhabit.

"We have processed more than 1.5 million measurements from floating sensors to identify poorly sampled areas (18.6% of the global ocean surface)."

"By comparing this with gaps in current observations by drifting profiling sensors (known as Argo floats) we identified poorly sampled areas where data from animal sensors would help fill gaps," said Professor Brendan Godley, who leads Exeter Marine.

"These include seas near the poles (above 60+ latitude) and shallow and coastal areas where Argo profilers are at risk of hitting the land.

"The Caribbean and seas around Indonesia, as well as other semi-enclosed seas, are good examples of places where Argo profilers struggle because of these problems."

Tagged seals in the poles have already complemented ocean observing systems because they can reach areas under ice that are inaccessible to other instruments.

The study suggests data collected by turtles or sharks could also enhance ocean monitoring in other remote and critical areas such as tropical regions, with large influence on global climate variability and weather.

The researchers say their work is a call for further collaboration between ecologists and oceanographers.

Professor Godley added: "It is important to note that animal welfare is paramount and we are only suggesting that animals that are already being tracked for ethically defensible and conservation-relevant ecological research be recruited as oceanographers. We do not advocate for animals being tracked solely for oceanography."

Research paper


Related Links
University of Exeter
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics

WATER WORLD
New Earth mission will track rising oceans into 2030
Pasadena CA (JPL) Nov 21, 2019
Earth's climate is changing, and the study of oceans is vital to understanding the effects of those changes on our future. For the first time, U.S and European agencies are preparing to launch a 10-year satellite mission to continue to study the clearest sign of global warming - rising sea levels. The Sentinel-6/Jason-CS mission (short for Jason-Continuity of Service), will be the longest-running mission dedicated to answering the question: How much will Earth's oceans rise by 2030? By 2030, Senti ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

WATER WORLD
Nuclear reactors with a newly proposed barrier could've withstood Chernobyl and Fukushima

NASA space data can cut disaster response times, costs

Pope to comfort victims of Japan's 2011 'triple disaster'

European court condemns Russia over asylum seekers' plight

WATER WORLD
Scientists turn fossil fuel pollutant into usable industrial chemical

Small, fast, and highly energy-efficient memory device inspired by lithium-ion batteries

University launches new materials to the International Space Station

Turning up the heat to create new nanostructured metals

WATER WORLD
Harvesting fog can provide fresh water in desert regions

El Nino seeing extreme swings in the industrial age

New Earth mission will track rising oceans into 2030

Underwater robotic gliders provide key tool to measure ocean sound levels

WATER WORLD
Arctic adventurers struggle as climate change thins ice

Two million-year-old ice cores provide first direct observations of an ancient climate

Last Arctic ice refuge is disappearing

Sea ice movements trace dynamics transforming the new Arctic

WATER WORLD
Drought impact study shows new issues for plants and carbon dioxide

Coated seeds may enable agriculture on marginal lands

Forest farms could create market for ginseng, other herbs

Monsanto pleads guilty to using banned pesticide on research crop

WATER WORLD
Living at the edge of an active volcano: Risk from lava flows on Mount Etna

More than 20 dead as Albania hunts for earthquake survivors

More than 40 dead after heavy rain pounds DR Congo capital

Deadly rainstorms sweep northern Italy, southern France

WATER WORLD
France reels from new blow in tough Africa mission

Zimbabwe turns to charcoal for cooking as power outages bite

French and Sahel soldiers step up campaign against jihadists

Four missing including expat found safe in Burkina Faso: govt

WATER WORLD
A monkey's balancing act

Skull study suggests pre-humans weren't as bright as modern apes

Brain enlightens the origin of human hand's skill

Extinct giant ape directly linked to the living orangutan