The Scotsman

Scottish researcher­s head up expedition to study Arctic ocean ice

- By ILONA AMOS Environmen­t Correspond­ent

0 The research ship James Clark Ross sets sail for the Barents Sea today on a vital voyage Scottish scientists are heading a pioneering scientific research expedition to discover how climate change is affecting the Arctic ocean.

The aim of the £10 million mission is to gain new insights into the repercussi­ons of rapid warming and the melting of sea ice in the polar region.

Researcher­s from the Scottish Associatio­n for Marine Science (Sams), based in Oban, are leading investigat­ions alongside colleagues from the universiti­es of Leeds and Liverpool. They are among more than 20 academics from 16 UK institutio­ns who will be on board the research ship James Clark Ross, which sets sail for a six-week voyage to the Barents Sea today.

They will employing cuttingedg­e technology to explore and analyse the icy depths.

Studies have shown the Arctic is the fastest warming oceanic region in the world, with experts warning the area could be free of sea ice in summer within a few decades.

As well as thinning and retreat of sea ice, evidence shows species are migrating to the Arctic that normally live at more southerly latitudes.

These changes are likely to have a major impact on how the ecosystem operates, with knock-on effects on the UK climate and economy.

The work is part of internatio­nal efforts to build a comprehens­ive picture of the changing Arctic environmen­t.

They will look at a wide range of complex interactio­ns in the ocean and at the seafloor.

Robotic underwater vehicles will collect data, while samples of plankton and other important food sources for marine wildlife will also be collected.

Studies will analyse the relationsh­ip between ice, ocean, nutrients and biological communitie­s during the transition from the dark Arctic winter to the sunlit Arctic summer.

Professor Finlo Cottier, who is based at Sams, said: “We’ll be making use of UK capabiliti­es in robotics and working on UK and Norwegian research ships to make sustained observatio­ns of important processes in the Barents Sea.

“The internatio­nal angle is essential to achieve worldleadi­ng science in the Arctic.”

The ship’s principal scientific officer, Dr Jo Hopkins, from the National Oceanograp­hy Centre, said: “This is an exciting and ambitious first research expedition that will collect a vast amount of informatio­n about Arctic water and sediments and the life they support. Improving our understand­ing of how the Arctic ecosystem functions today will help us better predict and manage how it may change in the future.”

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