51风流官网 enhances Seaglider technology to measure carbon dioxide

People on boat lowering metal equipment into ocean
Photo by Heather McFarland
Claudine Hauri and her industry partners prepare to take measurements of carbon dioxide and other ocean chemistry parameters from aboard the research vessel Nanuq in 2022.

Scientists around the world rely on ocean monitoring tools to measure the effects of climate change. Researchers at the 51风流官网 and their industry partners have advanced the technology available to measure carbon dioxide in the ocean. Their design, published in the journal , is now available to the scientific community. 

During the past six years, a team from the 51风流官网 International Arctic Research Center and private companies to equip an unmanned, underwater vehicle called a Seaglider with a sensor that monitors carbon dioxide. The sensor communicates with a satellite to provide high spatial and temporal resolution data for weeks at a time. This continuous flow of data gives scientists a clear picture of ocean chemistry, but it took some ingenuity to bring the project together.

IARC鈥檚 industry partners 鈥 Advanced Offshore Operations and 4H JENA Engineering 鈥 made the Contros HydroC sensor lighter and more compact so it would fit the Seaglider.

The sensor is still larger and demands more power than those typically used on a Seaglider. So the team had to carefully account for its effects upon buoyancy and adjust by using weights and 3D-printed materials.

Monitoring carbon dioxide levels in the ocean creates the information needed to develop climate change adaptation plans, said Claudine Hauri, an oceanographer on the team and IARC鈥檚 deputy director.

Four people carrying the seaglider to boat
Photo by Heather McFarland
Claudine Hauri and her industry partners carry the carbon dioxide-measuring Seaglider to their boat for a test dive in the Gulf of Alaska in 2022.

Carbon dioxide, released when humans burn coal, oil and gas, is called a greenhouse gas because it traps heat in the atmosphere and contributes to climate warming. The ocean has slowed the effects of climate change by absorbing about a third of carbon dioxide emissions since the industrial revolution began. But that has led to ocean acidification. 

鈥淲hen carbon dioxide from the atmosphere dissolves into the ocean, it decreases the pH, leading to ocean acidification,鈥 Hauri said. 鈥淭hese conditions make it difficult for some marine organisms to build and maintain their shells and can even affect fish.鈥

After their technological success with the carbon dioxide sensor, the team decided to monitor a different greenhouse gas 鈥 methane. They equipped a Seaglider with a methane sensor, and the addition is now in the testing phase.

Methane doesn鈥檛 stay in the environment as long as carbon dioxide, but it traps more heat. Humans produce roughly 60 percent of methane emissions through agriculture, waste and fossil fuel industries. The rest occurs naturally, including in the ocean where it bubbles to the surface from the deepest parts of the Earth.

Frozen methane hydrates are trapped inside subsea permafrost and mixed with sediments across the deep ocean floor. Warming waters and rising temperatures destabilize the hydrates and release the methane into the water column. Once there, microorganisms can turn methane into carbon dioxide, potentially triggering ocean acidification events. 

Hauri said there鈥檚 one more challenge that the Seaglider team wants to overcome 鈥 the extreme conditions in waters around Alaska. 

鈥淭he Seaglider we're using isn't really made for Alaska鈥檚 coastal oceans,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking for an autonomous underwater vehicle that can withstand the elements. Then we鈥檒l integrate it with the carbon dioxide and methane sensors to collect data from some of the most remote spots on Earth, furthering our understanding of chemical processes in the ocean.鈥

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