Lab Manager | Run Your Lab Like a Business

Scientists to Set Sail on Pioneering Deep Sea Research Expedition

Experimentation unit will enable researchers to test the ability of organisms found in deep water environments to deal with the effects of a spill

by University of Aberdeen
Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
5:00

MAC-EXP deviceThe MAC-EXP device being tested at the University's Oceanlab facility.Photo courtesy of University of AberdeenScientists from the University of Aberdeen are due to sail to the North Atlantic to test a pioneering piece of research equipment that will help improve our understanding of how deep ocean ecosystems function and respond to a major oil spill.

The Multi-Autoclave-Coring and Experimentation Unit (MAC-EXP), which has been developed at the University’s Oceanlab facility and funded through a £500,000 grant from the National Environmental Research Council, will enable researchers to test the ability of organisms found in deep water environments to deal with the effects of a spill.

By removing sediment from the ocean floor and keeping the sample under the same pressures experienced in deep water environments while carrying out experiments, the device will provide information that will help inform the approach towards protecting areas of the deep ocean that are subject to oil exploration and extraction, such as west of Shetland.

The experiments will take place aboard the deep-sea research vessel RRS Discovery, which will sail to the North Atlantic continental margins on May 13th.

Related Article: Shedding Light on Oil Behaviors Before the Next Spill

Professor Ursula Witte, who is leading the research, said: “The Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico was a stark reminder of the risks attached to human activity in largely unknown extreme environments, and it was estimated that up to 1.1 million barrels of leaked oil may have accumulated in the sediment, contaminating a massive area of the sea floor.

“With oil and gas exploration taking place in deeper waters there is an urgent need to improve our understanding of deep-sea ecosystems to assess the potential impact and implications of these activities, to ensure the adequate management of deep-sea biodiversity and natural resources.

“Most deep-sea organisms live in the so-called piezosphere, the volume of the deep sea that is over 1000 metres in depth and at pressures of 10MPa or more, and it is the combination of inaccessibility as well as the sensitivity of organisms to depressurization that account for our limited knowledge of the deep ocean ecosystem. MAC-EXP will help to improve our understanding.”

Dr. Stewart Chalmers, technical director of Oceanlab, added: “MAC-EXP is a unique system that is designed to enable us to capture accurate data on the ability of organisms to recover from major spills, by allowing us to remove sediment from the sea floor and keep it under the same conditions through an uninterrupted pressure chain that allows tests to be carried out at realistic environmental conditions.

“Our hope is that the system will mark a major step forward in our ability to understand the ability of organisms found in deep ocean environments to recover from a major spill.”