San Diego Union-Tribune

SCRIPPS OCEANOGRAP­HY TO DEPLOY ROBOTIC SENSORS

Devices funded by $53M grant will monitor ocean conditions around globe

- BY DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN deborah.brennan@ sduniontri­bune.com

LA JOLLA

A $53 million federal grant will enable Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy and other organizati­ons to build a fleet of robotic sensors to monitor conditions in oceans around the world.

The National Science Foundation grant, announced last month, will fund developmen­t of 500 ocean-monitoring f loats. Five top national research institutio­ns — including Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy at UC San Diego, University of Washing ton, Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n, and Princeton University — will team up to build and deploy the devices.

The robotic f leet will survey water from the surface to a depth of 2,000 meters — more than a mile deep. They will continuous­ly collect data that scientists use to observe ocean ecosystems and monitor elemental cycles of carbon, oxygen and nitrogen in the ocean. The f loats will also gather data on the growth and respiratio­n of phytoplank­ton, which provide the basis for the ocean’s food web, and regulate carbon cycles.

The data will be freely available to researcher­s, educators and government officials within a day of its collection, and will help inform fisheries management, climate science and studies on ocean warming and acidificat­ion. It will also be broadly available to the public, with workshops, webbased curricula, and hands-on activities for teachers, students and scientists. School and college classes will be able to adopt f loats, and student activities will be offered with the national Marine

Advanced Technology Education program. Courses based on the f loat technology will be offered through The Sandbox, a makerspace at Scripps Oceanograp­hy.

Scripps Oceanograp­hy, with the University of Washington and Woods Hole, will build and deploy f loats, working with commercial partners. Scripps will coordinate the f loat operations and ocean measuremen­ts.

Scientists currently use satellite data and shipboard expedition­s to study global oceans, but can only monitor a small portion of the ocean at any time through those means. Each float costs about the same as two days at sea on a ship, but will last five years, making them a cost-effective way to collect marine data. They’re able to function through all seasons and in severe weather conditions that research vessels couldn’t sustain.

Scripps researcher­s already rely on robotic f loats to survey the ocean, using Argo f loats built at Scripps Oceanograp­hy to measure temperatur­e and salinity in deep ocean basins, and a separate array of f loats that measure chemical and biological properties of the Southern Ocean.

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