Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Diy Science: Researchers Look To Recreational Sailors For Ocean Data

The Canadian Press Darpan, 10 Sep, 2014 11:03 AM
    With cutbacks in research dollars around the world, a group of international biologists believes it's time for some DIY science.
     
    The team is developing simple observations and tests that recreational sailors and boaters can undertake on the high seas in the name of knowledge.
     
    "The amount of funding that is allocated by various international governments is always somewhat inadequate, given what oceanographers would like to do," said Jay Cullen, of the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences at the University of Victoria.
     
    "So when we look at the number of private vessels ... that do transverse some of these less accessible and less sampled areas of the ocean, we see an opportunity," he said Tuesday.
     
    The ocean covers 70 per cent of the planet, and many scientists believe only a fraction of the marine life forms that call it home have been discovered.
     
    Research expeditions are prohibitively expensive, Cullen said, and the ocean far too vast for scientists to cover. But there are recreational sailors in "ships of opportunity" all over the world.
     
    "I think that sailors in particular have knowledge and experience and a vested interest in the health of the ocean," Cullen said.
     
    "My previous experiences with citizen science is that people are very happy and enthusiastic to volunteer."
     
    Cullen was one of a group of scientists involved in a pilot study last year that gathered simple data during a sailboat voyage from Cape Town, South Africa, to Phuket, Thailand.
     
    He developed a simple test for trace metals in the sea water along the route.
     
    "It involved taking samples off the moving ship with a pole with a bottle on the end and then processing the samples cleanly in a clean-air enclosure in, well, in the galley," he said with a chuckle.
     
    A trial expedition last year looked at the impact of shipping traffic on ocean biology and chemistry.
     
    Specifically, the Indigo V voyage gathered information on the microbes, viruses, bacteria and algae that form the base of the oceanic food chain, those responsible for key ocean processes such as carbon fixation and photosynthesis.
     
    Cullen's experiment looked at the types of algae and bacteria are present on the surface of the ocean and how they're affected by metals.
     
    "Our project demonstrated that with simple instruments and basic training, sailors can sample a wide range of waters and collect meaningful data, comprising the largest global oceanographic monitoring network to date," Frederico Lauro, the expedition director and an associate professor at the University of New South Wales and Nanyang Tehnological University in Singapore, said in a statement.
     
    In the future, they hope data gathered by "citizen scientists" will be processed by scientists, informing everything from weather forecasts to detection of changes in the ocean environment.
     
    The information could help search and rescue teams calculate the trajectory of debris in the ocean, or provide information on emerging threats to the marine environment, such as ocean acidification.
     
    Initial research into the project — published in the latest edition of the journal PLOS Biology — involved UVic and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, as well as institutes in Nevada, Australia, Singapore and Denmark.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith
    VANCOUVER - A court ruling at the centre of British Columbia's protracted teachers' strike, which has delayed the school year for half a million students, robs the government of its ability to set education policy, the province argues in documents related to an upcoming appeal.

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith

    Rock Snot? What Rock Snot? Interview Request Sets Off Public Relations Flurry

    Rock Snot? What Rock Snot? Interview Request Sets Off Public Relations Flurry
    It was a story about rock snot. And if there's a person you want to talk to about the pervasive algae also known by the less-offensive, more scientific name of Didymo, it's Fisheries and Oceans Canada scientist Max Bothwell.

    Rock Snot? What Rock Snot? Interview Request Sets Off Public Relations Flurry

    From The Coal Mine To Alberta's Top Political Office; The Life Of Jim Prentice

    From The Coal Mine To Alberta's Top Political Office; The Life Of Jim Prentice
    EDMONTON - Alberta's next premier grew up working "under the bins" of a Crownsnest coal mine, and now hopes to apply those principles to get his PC party back on top.

    From The Coal Mine To Alberta's Top Political Office; The Life Of Jim Prentice

    CRTC Set To Hold Hearing Into Broad Proposals For Changing TV Delivery System

    CRTC Set To Hold Hearing Into Broad Proposals For Changing TV Delivery System
    OTTAWA - Canada's broadcast regulator is set to begin a two-week public hearing into sweeping proposals that could, if adopted, dramatically change how Canadians receive and pay for their television.

    CRTC Set To Hold Hearing Into Broad Proposals For Changing TV Delivery System

    Next Alberta Premier Jim Prentice Aims To Turn The Page On Redford Era

    Next Alberta Premier Jim Prentice Aims To Turn The Page On Redford Era
    EDMONTON - Jim Prentice swept to victory Saturday in the Alberta Progressive Conservative party's leadership vote, promising to clean up a government bludgeoned and demoralized by scandal.

    Next Alberta Premier Jim Prentice Aims To Turn The Page On Redford Era

    Facts on candidates for leadership of Newfoundland and Labrador Tories

    Facts on candidates for leadership of Newfoundland and Labrador Tories
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Some facts about the candidates for the leadership of the governing Progressive Conservatives in Newfoundland and Labrador:

    Facts on candidates for leadership of Newfoundland and Labrador Tories