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Environmental Technologies
Woods Hole Sea Grant’s Environmental Technology
theme focuses on the initiation of research projects that will develop
and deploy innovative technologies to address specific problems
in coastal ecosystems; and the development of extension and outreach
activities to foster information transfer, education, and development
of new monitoring and treatment technologies. Thematic components
include:
Marine
biotechnology, including the development of molecular markers
for understanding contaminant effects in the environment and probes
for application to ecological processes
- Remediation technologies, including the development of new
approaches to understanding the degradation of contaminants in
the environment; and
- Remote technologies for monitoring the marine environment.
Goal:
New tools and technologies will be deployed that can be applied
to predicting and monitoring changes in environmental variables
and protecting resources in coastal ecosystems.
Objective 1: Principal investigators
will conduct research projects that will develop and deploy innovative
technologies to address specific problems in coastal ecosystems.
Objective 2: Extension and
outreach staff will develop programs to facilitate information transfer
about the development of new treatment and monitoring technologies.
Technology Aids Fishery Management
Assessing supply and balancing it with demand
is no doubt one of the biggest challenges for fisheries managers.
In California, the squid fishery is at or near maximum exploitation,
and increasing values have resulted in added fishing pressure over
the past decade. Complicating matters, squid have a 6–12-month
life cycle, making successful annual recruitment to the fishery
critical.
“Squid
are being exploited at an unprecedented rate, especially in Monterey
Bay,” says Roger Hanlon, a scientist at the Marine Biological
Laboratory who has studied squid behavior and reproduction for over
20 years. “Does it make sense to allow direct fishing of spawning
squids before enough eggs are laid for next year’s recruitment
class?” he asks.
To answer that question, California fisheries
biologists and NOAA Sanctuary managers first needed information
about the location of primary egg beds and inshore spawning grounds.
With Sea Grant support, Hanlon, along with WHOI engineer Ken Foote,
teamed up to marry technology and biology by designing an innovative
project using sonar to locate squid eggs. Squids lay their eggs—up
to 200 of them—in finger-shaped, gelatinous tubes. Female
squids deposit the egg fingers into huge, communal egg masses, called
mops. It turns out that side scan sonar can detect the presence
of the egg mops, displaying them as dark spots on multi-beam bathymetry
images taken from remotely operated vehicles. Investigators will
refine the methodology and continue the survey of egg mass distribution
in Monterey Bay on upcoming cruises in an effort to provide fishery
and sanctuary managers with monitoring and stock assessment tools.
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