|
The NewsRoom
Release: 4028
Date: August 31, 2009
MMS Funding Expedition to Study
Deepwater Coral Habitats
WASHINGTON – The Interior
Department’s Minerals Management Service, in collaboration with the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Office of Ocean
Exploration and Research, recently launched the third expedition in
a four-year, 3.7 million dollar study to learn more about sensitive
coral habitats and how to protect them from potential threats. This
project is being conducted under the auspices of the National
Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP), a collaboration of Federal
agencies providing leadership and coordination of national
oceanographic research and education programs. NOPP brings the
public and private sectors together to support larger, more
comprehensive projects, to promote sharing of resources, and to
foster community-wide innovative advances in ocean science,
technology and education.
The third expedition of the study
recently departed from Key West, Florida. This expedition will study
coral reefs off the coast of the northern Gulf of Mexico in water
more than 1,000 feet deep. This interagency study focuses on the
exploration and investigation of deepwater communities that have
developed on both natural and artificial hard substrates including
platforms and shipwrecks, with emphasis on deepwater coral habitats.
The study also has an exploratory component to look at unidentified
shipwrecks in very deep Gulf waters.
“MMS will use the discoveries and
results of this study to modify existing regulatory policies and
help us protect these important habitats from the impacts of oil and
gas exploration,” said Liz Birnbaum, Director of MMS. “The results
of this study will also enhance the understanding of deepwater coral
communities worldwide.”
There are extensive coral habitats
that thrive in very deep waters all over the world at depths of
thousands of feet. In the past decade, scientists began to realize
the extent of deep-water reefs and the vast variety of animals they
host. Research has shown the importance of these high-relief
deepwater coral habitats, which represent areas with large numbers
and diversity of invertebrates and fishes. Numerous areas of
structure-forming corals have been discovered in the deep Gulf of
Mexico, but little is known about their distribution and rarity.
These reefs provide a refuge for fish, sponges, crustaceans and
other marine creatures.
The contract for this four-year study
was awarded in July 2008 to TDI Brooks International Inc. with a
total science budget of 3.7 million dollars. The interdisciplinary
team will include scientists from Louisiana State University,
Pennsylvania State University, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi,
Temple University, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, C&C
Technologies, Smithsonian Institution, and Dauphin Island Sea Lab.
Leading scientists from around the world will also participate on
this cruise, which is the third of four expeditions to the Gulf of
Mexico.
Additional information about the
study and the expedition can be found on this web site:
http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/09lophelia/welcome.html
Contact:
Leann
Bullin 703-787-1755
MMS: Securing Ocean Energy & Economic Value for America
U.S. Department of the Interior
|
Privacy |
Disclaimers |
Accessibility |
Inspector General | FOIA
|
Last Updated:
09/11/2009,
01:09 PM
Central Time
|