March 2021

New Frontiers in Ocean Exploration: The E/V Nautilus, NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer, and R/V Falkor 2020 Field Season

GUEST EDITORS

Nicole A. Raineault, Joanne Flanders, and Eric Niiler

OCEANOGRAPHY

Vol. 34, No. 1, Supplement, March 2021

The E/V Nautilus, NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer,

and R/V Falkor 2020 Field Season

NEW FRONTIERS IN

OCEAN EXPLORATION

ON THE COVER. A team aboard E/V Nautilus

recovers ROV  Hercules after a dive in the

Southern California Borderland in November

2020 (NA124). Image credit: Ocean Exploration

Trust/Nautilus Live

A variety of life, including corals and a very

rare Astrosarkus (commonly called a "pumpkin

star"), cling to a scarp face at 120 m depth found

during one of Schmidt Ocean Institute's expe-

ditions near Lihou Reef in the Coral Sea Marine

Park. This occurrence of the pumpkin star is a

substantial range extension to what has been

known. Image credit: Schmidt Ocean Institute

PREFERRED CITATION

Raineault, N.A., J. Flanders, and E. Niiler, eds. 2021. New frontiers in ocean exploration: The E/V Nautilus,

NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer, and R/V Falkor 2020 field season. Oceanography 34(1), supplement, 78 pp.,

https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2021.supplement.01.

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................1

Inner Space Center Media Production in the Cloud: Adapting Ocean Science Communication for the 21st Century ....................4

2020 Expedition Overview Map ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................6

PART 1. OCEAN EXPLORATION TRUST – E/V NAUTILUS .............................................................................................................................................8

Technology ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................10

Microbes to Microplastics: E/V Nautilus Expedition Samples in 2020 ...................................................................................................................................18

Bringing the Ocean to a Remote Learning World: Innovating with Telepresence .....................................................................................................20

Nautilus Field Season Overview ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................24

• Telepresence Closes the Distance in E/V Nautilus 2020 Field Season ...............................................................................................................................26

• Expanding Seabed Mapping: Supporting the US National Ocean Exploration and Characterization Efforts

in the US West Coast Exclusive Economic Zone..................................................................................................................................................................................28

• Ocean Networks Canada: Advancing Ocean Observing Technology and Science ...............................................................................................30

• Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary and Gradients of Blue Economic Seep Resources ...................................................................32

• Exploring Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary .....................................................................................................................................................................34

• California Streaming: Exploring Deep-Sea Coral and Sponge Assemblages in Sunny Southern California ....................................36

• Biodiversity Baselines and Biopharmaceutical Potential for the Borderland .............................................................................................................38

• Updates from the NOAA Ocean Exploration Cooperative Institute ...................................................................................................................................40

PART 2. NOAA OFFICE OF OCEAN EXPLORATION AND RESEARCH ............................................................................................................44

Introduction: Looking Back and Looking Forward with the National Strategy for Mapping, Exploring,

and Characterizing the US Exclusive Economic Zone ........................................................................................................................................................................46

Harnessing the Blue Economy by Expanding Ocean Exploration ...........................................................................................................................................48

Exploring and Characterizing the Ocean ......................................................................................................................................................................................................51

Engaging Educators and the Public with Virtual Tools ......................................................................................................................................................................53

OER Partnerships Lead to New Exploration Technologies .............................................................................................................................................................55

Overcoming Challenges While Looking Ahead to 2021 ..................................................................................................................................................................57

PART 3. SCHMIDT OCEAN INSTITUTE – R/V FALKOR ....................................................................................................................................................58

Exploration Down Under: The Schmidt Ocean Institute 2020 Field Season....................................................................................................................60

WHAT’S NEXT: OVERCOMING A TUMULTUOUS YEAR .................................................................................................................................................68

Authors ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................70

Acknowledgments ..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................72

References ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................77

Acronyms ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................78

In the deep dark ocean, life seems to

attract other life. This small crusta-

cean clings happily to a black coral

where it sifts through the food that

the water movement delivers, both for

the coral and the crustacean. Image

credit: Schmidt Ocean Institute

INTRODUCTION

By Nicole A. Raineault, Genene Fisher, and Carlie Wiener

This eleventh installment of the annual ocean exploration

supplement to Oceanography, the official magazine of

The Oceanography Society, highlights the work of three

vessels that contribute to exploring the world ocean:

the Ocean Exploration Trust’s (OET's) E/V Nautilus, NOAA

Ship Okeanos Explorer, and Schmidt Ocean Institute’s

(SOI's) R/V Falkor.

Although the global COVID-19 pandemic impacted the

2020 programs, it did not prevent the execution of signif-

icant ocean exploration work, both at sea and on shore.

R/V Falkor and E/V Nautilus took to the seas for modified

programs. NOAA paused at-sea operations for Okeanos

Explorer, with the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and

Research (OER) instead focusing on development of

universal exploration products and enhancement of its

virtual engagement efforts. The pages that follow contain

summaries of the 2020 expeditions, including initial results;

highlights of new programs and initiatives, many of which

were catalyzed by the pandemic; and information on future

exploration plans.

The first section highlights OET and E/V Nautilus pro-

grams. The pandemic delayed the start of the season, as

the shipyard work to replace the engine was slowed. New

mobile control vans and an integrated studio van were also

installed and tested before the season got underway in

August. The shipboard team size was limited, which meant

many dives and entire expeditions were led from shore.

OET conducted cabled observatory work in partnership

with Ocean Networks Canada and the University of Victoria

(pages 30–31). Olympic Coast, Greater Farallones, Monterey

Bay, and Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuaries and

sites within the proposed Chumash Heritage National

Marine Sanctuary were mapped and characterized

with remotely operated vehicles (ROVs; pages 32–37).

Expeditions focusing on the US blue economy featured

ROV dives along the California Borderland and the Cascadia

margin, supporting research into the biopharmaceutical/

biotechnological possibilities of the deep sea and the

broader importance of these areas (pages 32–33 and

38–39). Finally, the NOAA Ocean Exploration Cooperative

Institute (OECI) hired a director, Adam Soule, who started

work at the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School

of Oceanography in January. The institutions involved in

this venture have formalized working groups organized

to catalyze collaborations in key areas such as science and

technology, data management and usability, telepresence

technologies, and education and branding. Technologies

that will improve our ability to explore the ocean were

modified, acquired, or tested and will feature in the Nautilus

2021 field season and beyond (pages 40–43).

The second section focuses on the 2020 activities of the

NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research. It opens

with an overview of the US strategy for ocean exploration

that led to OER’s creation (page 46–47) and then intro-

duces the new White House National Strategy for Mapping,

Exploring, and Characterizing the United States Exclusive

Economic Zone (NOMEC, 2020) and describes how OER’s

mission fits within its blueprint (pages 46–47). The section

discusses an underlying objective of the National Ocean

Mapping, Exploration, and Characterization (NOMEC)

Council to expand the US blue economy (pages 48–50),

provides examples of OER’s grant-supported projects that

are tied to the blue economy in the areas of bioprospect-

ing (page 49) and deep-sea methane seeps (page 49), and

describes development plans for a long-duration sensor

platform (page 50). OER then summarizes work that sup-

ports the NOMEC blueprint for exploration and characteri-

zation of the US Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and provides

examples of the deep-sea products, exploration models,

and strategies (pages 51–52) that can be utilized by the

broader community. This section also describes a mapping

survey conducted in partnership with a commercial firm

and designed to accelerate mapping of the EEZ (page 52);

its success filled a significant gap in EEZ coverage while

advancing objectives of the Atlantic Seafloor Partnership

for Integrated Research and Exploration (ASPIRE). OER

then discusses the NOMEC objective to build public and

private partnerships and inspire and involve the public

through such efforts as a matrixed educational program,

new professional development offerings for educators, and

an expanded internship program (pages 53–54). Next, OER

highlights the OER-supported NOMEC objective to develop

new and emerging science and mapping technologies and

features advancements in telepresence, remote mapping,

and autonomous vessel technologies (pages 55–57). This

section closes with a quick look at 2021 plans for Okeanos

Explorer. After a series of shakedowns and sea trials for new

mission systems that were installed during the winter repair

period, the ship will conduct a technology demonstration

as part of OER's commitment to advancing ocean technol-

ogies, explore seamounts off New England in support of

ASPIRE priorities, and focus on deep-sea mapping offshore

the southeastern United States (page 57).

The year 2020 held surprises and discoveries for Schmidt

Ocean Institute, as R/V Falkor undertook a year-long initia-

tive in waters off Australia. Eight expeditions with inter-

disciplinary teams of scientists from Australia and around

the world allowed for some of the first visualizations of

the continent's deep-sea environments (pages 58–67).

The collected imagery, samples, and data have important

implications for future management decisions within the

Coral Sea, Gascoyne, and Great Barrier Reef Marine Parks.

Along with the underwater surveys, Falkor’s mapping effort

will help scientists better understand the Australian conti-

nent’s formation, history, and how its ecosystems have

responded to climatic shifts and tectonic movement in the

geologic past. This section highlights the expeditions filled

with surprising new species, achievements, and discover-

ies, including a 500 m tall detached reef in the Great Barrier

Reef—the first discovered in this area in the last 120 years.

Exploration in 2021 will capitalize on the groundwork laid

this past year by the NOAA Ocean Exploration Cooperative

Institute as we apply new technologies and concepts of

operation to our expeditions. As this publication went

to press, OER welcomed aboard its new Cooperative

Institute Manager who will work closely with the OECI

host University of Rhode Island and partnership institu-

tions at the University of New Hampshire, the University

of Southern Mississippi, the Woods Hole Oceanographic

Institution, and the not-for-profit Ocean Exploration Trust.

Nautilus will explore the waters between the US West

Coast and Canada and then move west to continue explo-

ration within the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National

Monument and other waters off Hawai‘i. Okeanos Explorer

will conduct a technology demonstration expedition,

explore the New England and Corner Rise Seamounts that

formed when the North American Plate moved over the

Great Meteor hotspot about 75 million years ago, and close

gaps in the bathymetric coverage of waters offshore the

southeastern United States. An objective of the demonstra-

tion is to validate and develop the use of Terrain Relative

Navigation with respect to full ocean depth (11,000  m)

capable autonomous underwater vehicles. Schmidt Ocean

Institute will continue to brave new frontiers in the ocean,

pursuing work in Australian waters and the Pacific Ocean

with skilled research, community participation, and inter-

disciplinary collaborations. SOI, OET, and OER are partner-

ing with large-scale international initiatives such as the

UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development

and the Nippon Foundation-GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project.

These global campaigns are good examples of how collab-

oration can lead to broader understanding of our ocean.

We are committed to this collaborative work and extremely

hopeful about the future.

During an expedition in the Coral Sea, Schmidt

Ocean Institute uses ROV  SuBastian to sample

sea life in the water column for Dhugal Lindsay,

a collaborator following remotely from the Japan

Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology.

Image credit: Schmidt Ocean Institute

The Inner Space Center (ISC) is a leader in using cutting-

edge telepresence technologies to support live ocean

exploration and connect scientists and other audiences on

shore with ocean science activities at sea. During a standard

ocean exploration season, the ISC provides telepresence

engineering and media production support for vessels such

as NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer and E/V Nautilus to facilitate,

capture, produce, and promote underwater exploration in

real time. Although 2020 was a nontraditional exploration

season in many ways, the ISC was well positioned to meet

many of the challenges associated with remote networking

and ocean science engagement during the pandemic.

However, without ship-based communicators to estab-

lish an engagement link, the ISC Media and Production

Team had to adapt the way in which audiences—science

and nonscience—could use telepresence connections and

access oceanographic content. The team had to redefine

production strategies while working from home and con-

duct more virtual meetings in the cloud.

Advancing Reach Through Telepresence Technology

(ARTT) was the team’s first successful demonstration of

remote media production. The highly produced video piece,

fully created while team members worked entirely at home,

was submitted to the US National Science Foundation’s

(NSF) STEM for All Video Showcase in May 2020. The video

highlighted the ocean science research and communication

efforts of the NSF-funded Northwest Passage Project

(Figure 1). It received over 3,600 views and was awarded a

“Presenter’s Choice” medal during the Showcase.

To further media and production efforts during the pan-

demic, the team connected with existing partners to talk

about engagement priorities and remote programming

considerations. Members of the media and communica-

tions industry were also contacted to better understand

the production tools and techniques they used for virtual

engagement. This initial research was key to developing

effective processes for cloud-based media production. New

ways of collaboration were realized, and IP-based tools were

identified and tested to broadly support the engagement

activities of the ocean exploration community.

Software-based IP communications, which maintain

content and media assets in the cloud, are less expensive

and require less staff time to operate than traditional

telepresence practices. These strategies free up resources

for other purposes, such as creating targeted programming

for specific audiences and achieving continuity across

different communication platforms. However, shifting to a

more IP-based mode of communication and production is

a fundamental shift away from traditional ISC telepresence

models, which are built on broadband-based equipment

and signal flow as well as high-end broadcast hardware and

hub-like facilities to support communication infrastructure.

The ISC tested and invested in multiple pieces of produc-

tion software to successfully produce engaging and inter-

active programming in the cloud. Mobile-friendly intercom

applications, like Unity Intercom, were utilized for remote

communications during live programs. The ease of the

modern, web-based, user-friendly platform StreamYard,

with an Internet connection as the only requirement,

allowed connection to activities with one click.

This more accessible, browser-based entry point

increased science communication opportunities with

ocean and engineering professionals while not burdening

them with the unnecessary weight of managing produc-

tion elements. Collecting and formatting images and

video, building a specific brand for each series or program,

displaying and transitioning media during live programs,

monitoring audio, tracking audience questions and

Inner Space Center Media Production in the Cloud

Adapting Ocean Science Communication for the 21st Century

By Holly Morin, Alex DeCiccio, Ryan Campos, Jessica Kaelblein, Derek Sutcliffe, and Dwight F. Coleman

FIGURE 1. Almost a year after successful completion of the Northwest

Passage Project, the ISC participated in the NSF STEM for All Video

Showcase to share the project’s research, student engagement, and

science communication techniques with others in the STEM com-

munity. Advancing Reach Through Telepresence Technology was

entirely produced by the ISC Team while working from home.

44

A few noteworthy lessons were learned during the ISC’s

dive into IP-based media production from home. The team

developed a renewed awareness of the importance of

workforce dynamics such as patience, respect, and flexi-

bility. At the same time, effective and consistent commu-

nication— both internally and externally— remained a top

priority. Each ISC Media and Production project began with

a dialogue that focused within a single, shared document.

These documents became the framework that guided the

development of each program. They also formed the back-

bone for a new, collaborative process for efficient media

production, one that embraces uncertainty and new ideas

as well as the free flow of communication.

Although the year 2020 was challenging, the adjustment

to working in a virtual environment offered an opportunity

to reflect on best practices and improve efficiencies. A new

sense of place and potential paradigm shift for ocean explo-

ration media production was recognized in the cloud envi-

ronment. It is nimble and accessible and highlights the ISC’s

efforts to embrace modern approaches to communicating

science and enabling future capacities for the way people

connect to the world of ocean science and exploration.

comments in real time, and sharing questions with hosts

and experts during live broadcasts were the responsibility

of ISC staff working remotely from home. This enhanced

the impact of each program by allowing presenters to

focus on telling their stories and engaging with hosts and

audiences. Broadcast format transitioned from a more

standard, single speaker/presentation style to one that was

more interactive and conversation-based (Figure 2).

Guests and hosts alike noted the seamlessness of these

programs and appreciated the ease of discussion that

took place. The comfort level of teleconferencing helped

accelerate the early adoption of these programs in terms of

connecting with subject matter experts and sharing their

stories from home.

An IP-based approach to interactive programming also

allowed ship-based feeds to be incorporated into the same

browser-based broadcast studio. This created a unique

opportunity for an enhanced “watch-party” environment

with video and audio that included select shore-based

observers and ship personnel (Figure 3). As IP-based com-

munications replaced certain components of the traditional

broadcast environment, ISC production members could

also “hot-swap” their roles and responsibilities, even during

live programming. Such flexibility allowed for expanded

training opportunities for producers and communicators,

including those outside the ISC team.

From April through December 2020, the ISC produced

and/or hosted over 40 virtual and interactive programs,

including 17 Ocean Classroom Live episodes in collabora-

tion with the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School

of Oceanography (URI/GSO) (Figure 4). The programs

covered topics such as ocean careers, shark behavior and

biology, and hurricanes; they aired through outlets such as

YouTube and Facebook Live; and they have been archived

to these social media platforms as well as the URI/GSO

website with associated resources. As of December 2020,

the videos have received nearly 10,000 cumulative views

on Facebook and over 1,400 views on YouTube.

FIGURE 2. Remotely operated vehicle pilot and engineer, Jessica

Sandoval, speaks as a content expert in a Deep Sea Dialogues video

on underwater robotics. In addition to being a stand-alone media

piece, the video is also a supporting resource to NOAA OER’s virtual

professional development programs (supported by the ISC).

FIGURE 3. Hosted by Samantha Wishnak, Communications Manager

for the Ocean Exploration Trust, this Next on Nautilus: Channel

Islands National Marine Sanctuary and Santa Lucia Bank episode

featured the new ship broadcast studio and remote participants,

creating a “watch-party” environment between ship and shore.

FIGURE 4. During the 16th episode of the URI/GSO’s Ocean Classroom

Live, the ISC’s Alex DeCicco fields audience questions live, with

Colleen Peters and Kylie Pasternak of URI/GSO. The focus of this

episode was ship-based career stories.

1

5

4 3

6

7

2

Page 28

Expanding Seabed Mapping

in the US West Coast

Exclusive Economic Zone

Page 38

Biodiversity Baselines

and Biopharmaceutical

Potential for the Borderland

6

Page 30

Ocean Networks Canada:

Advancing Ocean Observing

Technology and Science

1

2

Page 32

Olympic Coast National

Marine Sanctuary and

Gradients of Blue Economic

Seep Resources

3

Page 36

Exploring Deep-Sea Coral

and Sponge Assemblages in

Southern California

5

Page 34

Exploring Monterey Bay

National Marine Sanctuary

4

Page 61

The Great Australian

Deep-Sea Coral and

Canyon Adventure

Page 62

Illuminating the

Biodiversity of the

Ningaloo Canyons

Page 63

Visioning the Coral Sea

Marine Park

Page 64

Seamounts, Canyons, and

Reefs of the Coral Sea

1

2

3

4

Page 65

Northern Depths of

the Great Barrier Reef

5

Page 66

Ice Age Geology of

the Great Barrier Reef

Page 67

Pinging in the New Year

6

7

R/V FALKOR EXPEDITIONS

E/V NAUTILUS

EXPEDITIONS

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84

Made with Publuu - flipbook maker