Rising temperatures, ocean acidification, and overfishing have now gained widespread notoriety as human-caused phenomena that are changing our seas. In recent years, scientists have increasingly recognized that there is yet another ingredient in that deleterious mix: a process called deoxygenation that results in less oxygen available in our seas.
Large-scale ocean circulation naturally results in low-oxygen areas of the ocean called oxygen deficient zones (ODZs). The cycling of carbon and nutrients – the foundation of marine life, called biogeochemistry – is fundamentally different in ODZs than in oxygen-rich areas. Because researchers think deoxygenation will greatly expand the total area of ODZs over the next 100 years, studying how these areas function now is important in predicting and understanding the oceans of the future. This first expedition of 2016 led by Dr. Mak Saito from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) along with scientists from University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, University of California Santa Cruz, and University of Washington aimed to do just that, investigate ODZs.
During the 28 day voyage named “ProteOMZ,” researchers aboard R/V Falkor traveled from Honolulu, Hawaii to Tahiti to describe the biogeochemical processes that occur within this particular swath of the ocean’s ODZs. By doing so, they contributed to our greater understanding of ODZs, gathered a database of baseline measurements to which future measurements can be compared, and established a new methodology that could be used in future research on these expanding ODZs.
Data & Publications
The resulting shipboard dataset is being stored at the Rolling Deck to Repository and is now available.
Bathymetry, Acoustic Backscatter, and XBT data are now available at the Marine Geoscience Data System portal.
Biochemistry & ProteOMZ Protein Data is archived at BCO-DMO, including event log, CTD log, Trace Metal Clean Rosette, McLane Pump Log, Protein and Peptide levels (Scroll down to Dataset Collections).
- Saunders, J., McIlvin, M., Dupont, C., Kaul, D., Moran, D., Horner, T., et. al. (2022). Microbial Functional Diversity Across Biogeochemical Provinces in the central Pacific Ocean. PNAS, 119 (37), doi: 10.1073/pnas.2200014119. [This article has been published as OPEN ACCESS].
- Middleton, J., Paytan, A., Auro, M., Saito, M., and Horner, T. (2023). Barium isotope signatures of barite-fluid ion exchange in Equatorial Pacific sediments. Earth and Planetary Sci. Letters (612), doi: 10.1016/j.epsl.2023.118150.
- Paoletti, M., Fournier, G., Dolan, E., and Saito, M. (2023). Metaproteogenomic Profile of a Mesopelagic Adenylylsulfate Reductase: Course-Based Discovery Using the Ocean Protein Portal. J. Proteome Res. 22(9), doi: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.3c00152. [This article has been published as OPEN ACCESS].
In the News
Hooked On The High Seas
Hawai’i Public Radio • January 27st, 2016
Le Falkor, Observateur Des Océans, Fait Escale au Port de Papeete
La Depeche de Tahiti • February 10th, 2016
Artists at Sea
All Things Marine Radio Show • February 16th, 2016
New Medical Technology Hits the High Seas Exploring Low Oxygen Waters
IUCN Global Marine Community Newsletter • February 19th, 2016
“ProteOMZ” Surfaces Findings in Low Oxygen Ocean Waters
Marine Technology News • February 19th, 2016
New Medical Technology Hits the High Seas Exploring Low Oxygen Waters
Abyse Technology News • February 19th, 2016
“ProteOMZ” Surfaces Findings in Low Oxygen Ocean Waters
Marine Link • February 19th, 2016
Analysis of Microbe Metabolism Could Reveal Clues about Atmosphere
Machine Design • February 24th, 2016
Art-Science Synergy at Work in the Tropical Pacific
WCAI NPR • March 7th, 2016
Oceanography yarn-bombed!
Deep Sea News • April 18th, 2016