Document of bibliographic reference 312341

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Global observing needs in the deep ocean
Abstract
The deep ocean below 200 m water depth is the least observed, but largest habitat on our planet by volume and area. Over 150 years of exploration has revealed that this dynamic system provides critical climate regulation, houses a wealth of energy, mineral, and biological resources, and represents a vast repository of biological diversity. A long history of deep-ocean exploration and observation led to the initial concept for the Deep-Ocean Observing Strategy (DOOS), under the auspices of the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS). Here we discuss the scientific need for globally integrated deep-ocean observing, its status, and the key scientific questions and societal mandates driving observing requirements over the next decade. We consider the Essential Ocean Variables (EOVs) needed to address deep-ocean challenges within the physical, biogeochemical, and biological/ecosystem sciences according to the Framework for Ocean Observing (FOO), and map these onto scientific questions. Opportunities for new and expanded synergies among deep-ocean stakeholders are discussed, including academic-industry partnerships with the oil and gas, mining, cable and fishing industries, the ocean exploration and mapping community, and biodiversity conservation initiatives. Future deep-ocean observing will benefit from the greater integration across traditional disciplines and sectors, achieved through demonstration projects and facilitated reuse and repurposing of existing deep-sea data efforts. We highlight examples of existing and emerging deep-sea methods and technologies, noting key challenges associated with data volume, preservation, standardization, and accessibility. Emerging technologies relevant to deep-ocean sustainability and the blue economy include novel genomics approaches, imaging technologies, and ultra-deep hydrographic measurements. Capacity building will be necessary to integrate capabilities into programs and projects at a global scale. Progress can be facilitated by Open Science and Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable (FAIR) data principles and converge on agreed to data standards, practices, vocabularies, and registries. We envision expansion of the deep-ocean observing community to embrace the participation of academia, industry, NGOs, national governments, international governmental organizations, and the public at large in order to unlock critical knowledge contained in the deep ocean over coming decades, and to realize the mutual benefits of thoughtful deep-ocean observing for all elements of a sustainable ocean.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000469301800001
Bibliographic citation
Levin, L.A.; Bett, B.J.; Gates, A.R.; Heimbach, P.; Howe, B.M.; Janssen, F.; McCurdy, A.; Ruhl, H.A.; Snelgrove, P.; Stocks, K.I.; Bailey, D.; Baumann-Pickering, S.; Beaverson, C.; Benfield, M.C.; Booth, D.J.; Carreiro-Silva, M.; Colaço, A.; Eblé, M.C.; Fowler, A.M.; Gjerde, K.M.; Jones, D.O.B.; Katsumata, K.; Kelley, D.; Le Bris, N.; Leonardi, A.P.; Lejzerowicz, F.; Macreadie, P.I.; McLean, D.; Meitz, F.; Morato, T.; Netburn, A.; Pawlowski, J.; Smith, C.R.; Sun, S.; Uchida, H.; Vardaro, M.F.; Venkatesan, R.; Weller, R.A. (2019). Global observing needs in the deep ocean. Front. Mar. Sci. 6: 241. https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00241
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Lisa Levin
author
Name
Brian Bett
author
Name
Andrew Gates
author
Name
Patrick Heimbach
author
Name
Bruce Howe
author
Name
Felix Janssen
author
Name
Andrea McCurdy
author
Name
Henry Ruhl
author
Name
Paul Snelgrove
author
Name
Karen Stocks
author
Name
David Bailey
author
Name
Simone Baumann-Pickering
author
Name
Chris Beaverson
author
Name
Mark Benfield
author
Name
David Booth
author
Name
Marina Carreiro-Silva
author
Name
Ana Colaço
author
Name
Marie Eblé
author
Name
Ashley Fowler
author
Name
Kristina Gjerde
author
Name
Daniel Jones
author
Name
Katsuro Katsumata
author
Name
Deborah Kelley
author
Name
Nadine Le Bris
author
Name
Alan Leonardi
author
Name
Franck Lejzerowicz
author
Name
Peter Macreadie
author
Name
Dianne McLean
author
Name
Fred Meitz
author
Name
Telmo Morato
author
Name
Amanda Netburn
author
Name
Jan Pawlowski
author
Name
Craig Smith
author
Name
Song Sun
author
Name
Hiroshi Uchida
author
Name
Michael Vardaro
author
author
Name
Robert Weller

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00241

Document metadata

date created
2019-07-02
date modified
2019-08-19