The Jerusalem Post

Robots to fan out across the world’s oceans to monitor their health

- • 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 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.”

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 modeling, 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.

 ?? (Nathan Frandino/Reuters) ?? THE TOP of a robotic near-shore ocean float floats in a test tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California.
(Nathan Frandino/Reuters) THE TOP of a robotic near-shore ocean float floats in a test tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California.

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