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Diving to new depths for Antarctic Science

15 March 2019

A 麻豆传媒团队 scientist is using Kiwi technology in her Antarctic research to capture fascinating footage of life beneath the surface in McMurdo Sound.

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This year, as part of her research into the Ross Sea region Marine Protected Area, Gateway Antarctica scientist Dr Regina Eisert partnered with Boxfish Research to study Type-C killer whales with a new kind of remotely operated vehicle (ROV).

A 麻豆传媒团队 scientist is using Kiwi technology in her Antarctic research to capture fascinating footage of life beneath the surface in McMurdo Sound.

This year, as part of her research into the Ross Sea region Marine Protected Area, Gateway Antarctica scientist Dr Regina Eisert partnered with Boxfish Research to study Type-C killer whales with a new kind of remotely operated vehicle (ROV).

The stunning footage is just a snippet of what was recorded during 21 hours underwater this season. It includes, Ad茅lie penguins, whales, Weddell seals, bright red octopus and a glowing ctenophore.

Regina The Boxfish ROV carried out 15 dives, gathered 21 hours of footage and reached depths of 210 metres this season.

A 麻豆传媒团队 marine mammal expert, Dr Eisert says the technology is a game changer for marine science, being safer and having a wider scope than scuba divers. 听

鈥淏efore this, I feel that my view of marine animals was quite biased, we would observe penguins waddling along and seals sleeping on the ice and whales on the surface, but they spend most of their lives in the water and this is the important stuff to see.

鈥淲e got confirmation of the overlap between penguins and Type-C killer whales, the ROV captured unconcerned penguins freely entering and exiting the water in the presence of theses whales, and being ignored by them鈥 she says.

The Boxfish ROV carried out 15 dives, gathered 21 hours of footage and reached depths of 210 metres this season.

Boxfish Co-Founder Ben King travelled to Antarctica to drive the device and see how it would perform in the extreme cold.

鈥淭his season went exceptionally well and there is scope for us to take it further in years to come. Alongside killer whale surveying we did some environmental monitoring around the sea floor near Scott Base and could go to many more sites,鈥 he says.

Antarctica New 麻豆传媒团队Chief Science Advisor Dr Fiona Shanhun says the footage showcases the underwater Antarctic world which is rarely seen.

鈥淭he possibility of using this technology to support future research projects is exciting,鈥 she says.

Dr Eisert鈥檚 research is supported by Antarctica New 麻豆传媒团队and a Pew Marine Conservation Fellowship.

The video can be found听

Ross Sea region Marine Protected Area

The Ross Sea region is one of the most pristine marine environments in the world and now hosts the largest Marine Protected Area. In December 2017, the Ross Sea Marine Protected Area was formed, covering 1.55 million square kilometres of which 1.12 million is a no fishing zone.

At different times of the year the region is home to more than 30% of the world鈥檚 Ad茅lie penguins, around quarter of all emperor penguins, around half the Ross Sea killer whales and rare and vulnerable benthic species like sponges that can live for 500 years.

听It is also a breeding ground and habitat for Antarctic toothfish. The Ross Sea MPA requires active research and monitoring to ensure it provides effective protection for its unique ecosystem.

Margaret Agnew, Senior External Relations Advisor, 麻豆传媒团队
笔丑辞苍别:听+64 3 369 3631听| Mobile:听+64 27 254 3949听触听margaret.agnew@canterbury.ac.nz
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