Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Ocean life in 3-D: Mapping phytoplankton with a smart AUV

An artist's visualization of Harald in the ocean, detecting and measuring chlorophyll a as an indication of phytoplankton amounts and locations.
Image: David Fierstein and Arild Hareide

From Gemini Search by Nancy Bazilchuk

Phytoplankton form the base of the marine food chain but are notoriously difficult for scientists to account for — a little like trying to identify and count motes of dust in the air.
A truly independent underwater vehicle shows it can do the job.

Trygve Olav Fossum watched an orange, torpedo-shaped instrument slide off the R/V Gunnerus and plop into the coastal waters near the island called Runde.
It was June 2017 and Fossum, a PhD candidate at NTNU, was part of a team of researchers trying to find answers to a vexing problem.

Runde, a triangle-shaped island off the mid-Norwegian coast, is known for its large seabird populations, including Atlantic puffins and Northern Gannets.

In recent years, bird numbers here and in much of the North Atlantic have dropped precipitously.
No one knows quite why.

As a first step in their search for clues, NTNU researchers had assembled an interdisciplinary team of geologists, biologists, mathematicians, computer scientists and engineers, like Fossum, whose two metre-long autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) would contribute to one of the most unusual pieces of information on the Gunnerus’s week-long survey.

Harald the smart AUV off on its hunt for phytoplankton patches.
Photo: Trygve Fossum, NTNU

Fossum’s AUV, named after the Norwegian oceanographer Harald Sverdrup, would collect information that allowed scientists to make a 3-D map of hot spots of phytoplankton.
These are the tiny single-celled algal cells at the base of the food chain.
Their microscopic size and tendency to collect in patches have made this information nearly impossible for biologists to gather in the past.

The AUV was programmed to think on the go — “seeing” where the phytoplankton were, choosing its own course to zoom in on patches in an area to get a better sample.
Scientists call this “adaptive sampling.” The 3-D maps, in turn, could provide important clues as to why bird populations around Runde were plummeting.

Puffins, photographed on Runde Island during early summer.
Populations of puffins and other seabirds that nest on Runde’s steep cliffs have dropped dramatically in recent years.
Photo: Rick Strimbeck/NTNU

Zooplankton eat phytoplankton.
Little fish eat zooplankton.
Bigger fish eat the smaller fish.
Finally, seabirds like puffins feast on these patches of fish.
If something was changing phytoplankton amounts or distribution, it could set off a chain reaction that could affect the birds.

Having a smart AUV that can be programmed to seek out phytoplankton patches “is a complete game-changer,” says Geir Johnsen, an NTNU biologist is collaborating on the project.
The results from Harald’s tour in the waters off Runde were recently reported in Science Robotics.

 The map is a screenshot that illustrates typical boat traffic near the island of Runde, which is indicated with the orange arrow.

 Runde island with the GeoGarage platform (NHS nautical chart)

Large areas of unknown, and concentrated patches of fecundity

Marine biologists face a fundamental problem.
The ocean is deep, broad and generally poorly understood.
Some areas are more interesting than others, especially the small, concentrated areas that teem with life, such as coastal waters or the places where currents meet.
To do their job, biologists need to understand what factors make some patches of ocean fertile while others are not.

Biologists describe this situation as, well, “patchiness,” Fossum said.
The patchiness of phytoplankton is related to a number of different biophysical interactions, such as currents, turbulence and mixing, and biological processes, like how many other creatures are eating the phytoplankton.

“That means it’s a very hard question to figure out what controls the patchiness of these organisms in the ocean,” Fossum said.

 Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of Ceratium spp., one of the main types of phytoplankton being studied off Runde.
Photo: NTB scanpix Science Photo Library

Even if you are in a place that’s known to be a hot spot, patchiness can make it difficult to accurately quantify marine organisms in the area, especially if you are taking samples from a research boat, says Glaucia Fragoso, a postdoc at NTNU’s Department of Biology who was on the cruise with Fossum.

“If we drop our sampler in the wrong spot, we may undersample and underestimate phytoplankton numbers,” she said.
“Or if we drop our sampler right in the middle of a patch, we can overestimate.”

Why patches are where they are

That’s what makes the adaptive sampling of Harald, the AUV, so unique, Fragoso said.
Given an area to explore, it can make a 3-D map of phytoplankton patches.
And knowing where patches are allows scientists to study other characteristics of that area so they better understand why the patches are where they are.

“Is the (phytoplankton) concentration there because of salinity?” said Fossum.
“Maybe the phytoplankton are concentrated along a temperature or salinity layer, or maybe there is some other physical effect that is keeping them where they are?”

Knowing where and why phytoplankton aggregate and cluster in different ways can help answer questions about creatures that depend on the ocean for food, like the seabirds at Runde.

Seabirds typically nest in areas where they have easy access to food, since they have to feed themselves and their chicks, too.
So figuring out phytoplankton amounts and where they are, in combination with other measurements, may help explain larger trends in seabird populations.
Adaptive sampling for greater detail

Harald was programmed with a sophisticated brain and equipped with a special measuring device called an ECOpuck nestled in its backside.
When Fossum released it into the water that June day, Harald would roam the ocean’s depths in an area bounded by a 700×700 metre box, collecting information to make a 3-D map of phytoplankton.

The ECOpuck doesn’t actually measure phytoplankton itself, but something called chlorophyll a fluorescence.
Phytoplankton use chlorophyll a pigments in the process of photosynthesis, and the substance fluoresces red when exposed to light.
The ECOpuck detects the fluorescence, which can indicate how much phytoplankton biomass is found in the water.

At the start of the AUV’s journey, it takes measurements on the sides of the box and then gradually zooms into the area outlined by the box as it detects the region that seems to have the most chlorophyll a, Fossum says

“It boxes in a volume of water and based on what it sees, it estimates what is inside,” he said.
“Then it plans a route for inside and makes a map of the most interesting region.
What I really want from this is an accurate map, with the accuracy where it is most needed — where the plankton aggregation is high.”

The researchers also relied on other sampling methods to collect even more information about plankton around Runde, including a special camera that took pictures of individual plankton, and counted and identified them automatically to help verify the results from the AUV.
A future for ships and AUVs

In spite of the success of the AUV, Fossum and others explain that biologists still need to gather information from other sources — like research cruises aboard the R/V Gunnerus.

“Oceanography is moving towards combined efforts to collect data, where robotic sampling is an essential part, providing capabilities and resolution that were previously unattainable with traditional methods,” Fossum said.
“The ultimate goal is to effectively measure the impact of climate change in the ecosystem, for example.”

Fossum says there’s a need for much more persistent monitoring of Norway’s coasts, marine protected areas, and fragile habitats.

“The goal is to eventually automate much more of this work, but we are not aiming to replace ships, they are still vital in this endeavour,” he said.

 NTNU biologist Geir Johnsen works on a piece of equipment on a remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV) that was also used on the Runde cruise.
Photo: Glaucia Fragoso, NTNU

The mystery remains

For her part, Fragoso sees the value of having an AUV like Harald to help pinpoint where she and other biologists should conduct more detailed sampling.

“Phytoplankton are just not easy to sample because they are constantly responding to an ever-changing environment,” she said.
“This gives us a lot of additional information about how phytoplankton occur in the water column.
And the more information we have, the better.”

As for the mystery of the birds on Runde, Fossum and Johnsen say scientists need to do more research over a longer period.
For example, the timing of food availability is very important for both fish and birds.

“Birds need to find food especially when their chicks are hatching, and the fish need to be the right species and size for seabirds to survive,” Johnsen says.
“Climate change and pollution are now rapidly altering conditions in the marine ecosystem, and we need to know more.”

“We took a snapshot of that area, which tells us something about the current ecosystem at that time,” Fossum added.
“But we’ll need to go back and get another snapshot to detect changes and identify potential causes to say something about why the birds are declining.”

Check out this video for a look at Runde and Harald the smart AUV’s brother Fridtjof in action :

The island of Runde, off the Norwegian coast near the town of Ålesund, is a well known paradise for seabirds, such as puffins.
But in recent years, seabird numbers here and in the North Atlantic have plummeted.
A team of researchers from NTNU and a smart autonomous underwater vehicle named Harald are on the hunt for clues as to why. 

Links :

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Xprize finalists test new technologies for $1M NOAA bonus prize


From NOAA

 Unmanned Tools Track Underwater Sources Of Chemical And Biological Signals

As the world’s leader in designing and managing incentive competitions to solve humanity’s grand challenges, XPRIZE announced this week that the three finalist teams competing for the $1 million Bonus Prize sponsored by NOAA, in its Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE, have tested their technologies in Ponce, Puerto Rico.

The $1M NOAA Bonus Prize is part of the $7M Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE, a three-year global competition challenging teams to advance ocean technologies for rapid, unmanned and high-resolution ocean exploration.
To win the NOAA portion of the prize, competing teams need to demonstrate that their technology can identify and track, or “sniff out,” a specified object in the ocean by tracing a biological or chemical signal to its source.
The development of such technologies can help detect sources of pollution, identify hydrothermal vents and methane seeps, as well as track marine life for scientific research and conservation efforts.
The winning devices could also be used to identify and track signals from sunken vessels including planes, ships, or submarines in the future.

“The NOAA Bonus Prize teams are developing exciting, pioneering technologies that will help us uncover the mysteries of the ocean,” said Jyotika Virmani, Ph.D., Executive Director of the Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE.
“Having the opportunity to bring these teams, and their technologies, to beautiful Puerto Rico as originally planned is a win-win for everyone involved, and we were delighted to be able to work with our local partners.”

“XPRIZE represents the rapid scientific progress that can be gained through successful public-private partnerships,” said United States Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross.
“Moreover, this competition plays a dual role: potentially providing NOAA with invaluable tools to oversee the health of our oceans, while also demonstrating the resilience of local Puerto Rican communities in the aftermath of the tragic hurricanes of 2017.”

The final field test fulfills XPRIZE’s commitment to Puerto Rico, after initial plans to host its round one field tests for the Ocean Discovery XPRIZE were cancelled due to the destruction and devastation of Hurricanes Irma and Maria in September 2017.
Between January 20 to February 2, the finalist teams showcased their technologies by trying to detect and track a plume from two sources in a test zone established off the south coast of Ponce.


Advancing blue economy

“New technologies that can detect and trace chemical and biological signals in the ocean is another stunning achievement in expanding the blue economy,” said retired Navy Rear Adm. Timothy Gallaudet, Ph.D., acting under secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere at NOAA.
“This great public-private partnership supports NOAA’s critical mission to conserve and manage coastal and marine ecosystems and resources.”

For this final field test, XPRIZE partnered with the Government of Puerto Rico, the Port of Ponce Authority, the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez and its Department of Marine Science in La Parguera, the United States Coast Guard, the Caribbean Coastal Ocean Observing System (CARICOOS), Ponce Yacht and Fishing Club, and multiple other government, nonprofit and commercial organizations to provide additional support technology, vessels, and logistical assistance.

“We are committed to providing the infrastructure and logistics to support the demonstration of new and exciting technologies, and at the same time show the scientific world the many benefits Puerto Rico offers as an attractive destination for research and innovation,” said Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rosselló.
“Puerto Rico’s privileged location in the Caribbean makes it the ideal destination to carry out world-class research.”

The NOAA Bonus Prize finalists who opted to compete for this Prize were initially chosen by an independent judging panel of seven experts as semi-finalists for the Ocean Discovery XPRIZE.

 Team Tampa Deep Sea Xplorers, one of the finalist teams competing in Puerto Rico for the $1M Bonus Prize sponsored by NOAA, in the $7M Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE
(Photo: Business Wire)

Teams in the final round include:

- BangaloreRobotics (Bangalore, Karnataka, India) – Led by Dr. Venkatesh Gurappa, this international team of students and enthusiasts from across the world share the common interest of making the world safe for human and other life forms through technology.
BangaloreRobotics’s goal is to create intelligent and autonomous robots that can replace human presence in hazardous areas.
The team is developing innovative and low-cost Underwater Swarm AUVs.

- Ocean Quest (San Jose, CA, United States) – Led by Danny Kim, Quest Institute has a long track record of taking on the most challenging endeavors in science and technology for the purposes of education and inspiring the next generation of leaders.
Quest is looking to innovate in the deep oceans arena to help foster not only new technology and techniques, but make ocean exploration and education accessible to the students around the world.
The team endeavors to design a marine STEM platform for students worldwide to enable project-based learning with new technology and techniques.

- Tampa Deep Sea X-plorers (Tampa, FL, United States) – Led by Edward Larson, the Tampa Deep-Sea X-plorers are an LLC registered in the state of Florida for the purpose of competing in the Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE.
The team seeks to harness the talents and resources of Central Florida's academic and business communities to design and build a viable solution to win the competition.
The team is using existing technology and side scanning sonar on multiple AUVs.

In addition to announcing its field test operations in Puerto Rico, XPRIZE also formed a new partnership with Ocean Infinity, the seabed survey and ocean exploration company that is credited for finding ARA San Juan, the Argentine Navy submarine which was lost on November 15, 2017.
The partnership will provide XPRIZE with the highest-resolution ocean seafloor maps of the competition area.
Combined with data from XPRIZE partner Fugro, these maps form the baseline against which teams’ technologies will be judged for the Grand Prize of the Ocean Discovery XPRIZE.

The winners of the NOAA Bonus XPRIZE as well as the Grand Prize winner(s) of the Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE will be announced by June 2019.

For more information, visit oceandiscovery.xprize.org.

About XPRIZE

XPRIZE, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, is the global leader in designing and implementing innovative competition models to solve the world’s grandest challenges.
Active competitions include the Lunar XPRIZE, the $20M NRG COSIA Carbon XPRIZE, the $15M Global Learning XPRIZE, the $10M ANA Avatar XPRIZE, the $7M Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE, the $7M Barbara Bush Foundation Adult Literacy XPRIZE, and the $5M IBM Watson AI XPRIZE.
For more information, visit xprize.org.

Links :

Monday, March 11, 2019

New Zealand (Linz) update in the GeoGarage platform

12 nautical raster charts updated

Canada (CHS) layer update in the GeoGarage platform

69 nautical charts have been updated & 2 new charts added

How the Internet travels across oceans


Note: Cables shown in the map are ones that are currently in use, planned or being constructed.
They do not show cables that were decommissioned.
The content providers comprise cables publicly announced that Apple, Google, Microsoft or Netflix partly own, solely own or are a major capacity buyer of a cable owned by another company.
Source: TeleGeography

From NY Times by Adam Satariano

‘People think that data is in the cloud, but it’s not. It’s in the ocean.’ 

The internet consists of tiny bits of code that move around the world, traveling along wires as thin as a strand of hair strung across the ocean floor.
The data zips from New York to Sydney, from Hong Kong to London, in the time it takes you to read this word.


Nearly 750,000 miles of cable already connect the continents to support our insatiable demand for communication and entertainment.
Companies have typically pooled their resources to collaborate on undersea cable projects, like a freeway for them all to share.

But now Google is going its own way, in a first-of-its-kind project connecting the United States to Chile, home to the company’s largest data center in Latin America.

 Source: TeleGeography

“People think that data is in the cloud, but it’s not,” said Jayne Stowell, who oversees construction of Google’s undersea cable projects.
“It’s in the ocean.”

Getting it there is an exacting and time-intensive process.
A 456-foot ship named Durable will eventually deliver the cable to sea.
But first, the cable is assembled inside a sprawling factory a few hundred yards away, in Newington, N.H.
The factory, owned by the company SubCom, is filled with specialized machinery used to maintain tension in the wire and encase it in protective skin.


The cables begin as a cluster of strands of tiny threads of glass fibers.
Lasers propel data down the threads at nearly the speed of light, using fiber-optic technology.
After reaching land and connecting with an existing network, the data needed to read an email or open a web page makes its way onto a person’s device.

While most of us now largely experience the internet through Wi-Fi and phone data plans, those systems eventually link up with physical cables that swiftly carry the information across continents or across oceans.

In the manufacturing process, the cables move through high-speed mills the size of jet engines, wrapping the wire in a copper casing that carries electricity across the line to keep the data moving.
Depending on where the cable will be located, plastic, steel and tar are added later to help it withstand unpredictable ocean environments.
When finished, the cables will end up the size of a thick garden hose.


A year of planning goes into charting a cable route that avoids underwater hazards, but the cables still have to withstand heavy currents, rock slides, earthquakes and interference from fishing trawlers.
Each cable is expected to last up to 25 years.

A conveyor that staff members call “the Cable Highway” moves the cable directly into Durable, docked in the Piscataqua River.
The ship will carry over 4,000 miles of cable weighing about 3,500 metric tons when fully loaded.

Inside the ship, workers spool the cable into cavernous tanks.
One person walks the cable swiftly in a circle, as if laying out a massive garden hose, while others lie down to hold it in place to ensure it doesn’t snag or knot.
Even with teams working around the clock, it takes about four weeks before the ship is loaded up with enough cable to hit the open sea.



The first trans-Atlantic cable was completed in 1858 to connect the United States and Britain.
Queen Victoria commemorated the occasion with a message to President James Buchanan that took 16 hours to transmit.

While new wireless and satellite technologies have been invented in the decades since, cables remain the fastest, most efficient and least expensive way to send information across the ocean.
And it is still far from cheap: Google would not disclose the cost of its project to Chile, but experts say subsea projects cost up to $350 million, depending on the length of the cable.

In the modern era, telecommunications companies laid most of the cable, but over the past decade American tech giants started taking more control.
Google has backed at least 14 cables globally.
Amazon, Facebook and Microsoft have invested in others, connecting data centers in North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Africa, according to TeleGeography, a research firm.

Countries view the undersea cables as critical infrastructure and the projects have been flash points in geopolitical disputes.
Last year, Australia stepped in to block the Chinese technology giant Huawei from building a cable connecting Australia to the Solomon Islands, for fear it would give the Chinese government an entry point into its networks.

source : TeleGeography

Yann Durieux, a ship captain, said one of his most important responsibilities was keeping morale up among his crew during the weeks at sea.
Building the infrastructure of our digital world is a labor-intensive job.

With 53 bedrooms and 60 bathrooms, the Durable can hold up to 80 crew members.
The team splits into two 12-hour shifts.
Signs warn to be quiet in the hallways because somebody is always sleeping.

The ship will carry enough supplies to last at least 60 days: roughly 200 loaves of bread, 100 gallons of milk, 500 cartons of a dozen eggs, 800 pounds of beef, 1,200 pounds of chicken and 1,800 pounds of rice.
There’s also 300 rolls of paper towels, 500 rolls of toilet paper, 700 bars of soap and almost 600 pounds of laundry detergent.
No alcohol is allowed on board.


“I still get seasick,” said Walt Oswald, a technician who has been laying cables on ships for 20 years.
He sticks a small patch behind his ear to hold back the nausea.
“It’s not for everybody.”

Poor weather is inevitable.
Swells reach up to 20 feet, occasionally requiring the ship captain to order the subsea cable to be cut so the ship can seek safer waters.
When conditions improve, the ship returns, retrieving the cut cable that has been left attached to a floating buoy, then splicing it back together before continuing on.

Work on board is slow and plodding.
The ship, at sea for months at a time, moves about six miles per hour, as the cables are pulled from the giant basins out through openings at the back of the ship.
Closer to shore, where there’s more risk of damage, an underwater plow is used to bury the cable in the sea floor.



The Durable crew doesn’t expect the work to slow down anytime soon.

After the Latin America project, Google plans to build a new cable running from Virginia to France, set to be done by 2020.
The company has 13 data centers open around the world, with eight more under construction — all needed to power the trillions of Google searches made each year and the more than 400 hours of video uploaded to YouTube each minute.


“It really is management of a very complex multidimensional chess board,” said Ms. Stowell of Google, who wears an undersea cable as a necklace.

Demand for undersea cables will only grow as more businesses rely on cloud computing services.
And technology expected around the corner, like more powerful artificial intelligence and driverless cars, will all require fast data speeds as well.
Areas that didn’t have internet are now getting access, with the United Nations reporting that for the first time more than half the global population is now online.

source : ESRI
The International Cable Protection Committee has emphasize the need for accurate charting of submarine cables and to respect UNCLOS due regard principle between deep sea mining contractors and owners of submarine cables.
The map shows in general the large number of submarine cables around the world.
Lots of communication and the Internet goes through submarine cables, damaging one could have a great impact around the world.
The ICPC and the IHO MSDI WG will work together to develop a S-4XX product spec to be used for the maritime community.

“This is a huge part of the infrastructure that’s making that happen,” said Debbie Brask, the vice president at SubCom, who is managing the Google project.
“All of that data is going in the undersea cables.”

Links :