The Chronicle

UK-based explorers hit Indian Ocean

TEAM HOPES TO DISCOVER SPECIES

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BRITISH-BASED scientists have begun a mission to explore the depths of the Indian Ocean, one of the planet’s last great unexplored frontiers.

Ocean Zephyr, the science vessel of the Nekton Mission group, is in the Seychelles for the first stage of a multi-year mission to explore the depths of the ocean and document the effects of global warming.

Researcher­s from more than 40 organisati­ons will spend seven weeks surveying underwater life, mapping the sea floor and dropping sensors to depths of up to 6,560ft in the seas around the Seychelles.

Their aim is to document changes that could affect billions of people throughout the Indian Ocean region over the coming decades.

The Seychelles, a collection of 115 islands with fewer than 100,000 inhabitant­s, is already feeling the effects of climate change, with rising water temperatur­es bleaching its coral reefs.

The scientists are using crewed submarines and remotely operated submersibl­es to visit the watery world below depths of 100ft, and hope they might find new species.

Nekton is an independen­t nonprofit research institute that works with the University of Oxford to increase scientific understand­ing of the oceans. It has chartered the Ocean Zephyr, a Danish-flagged supply ship, to explore the waters around the Seychelles, a collection of islands about 930 miles east of the African coast.

This is the first of half a dozen regions the Nekton Mission plans to explore before the end of 2022.

Along with 18 crew members there are 33 scientists, technician­s and reporters on board. Researcher­s have started by heading to the Farquhar Atoll, a group of islands about 480 miles south west of Victoria.

 ??  ?? A submarine launched from the Ocean Zephyr is tested off the coast of Victoria
A submarine launched from the Ocean Zephyr is tested off the coast of Victoria

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