Alteration In The Nodule Coverage Due To Biogenic Disturbance In The IOM Exploration Area: Some Environmental Concerns

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 1484 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2011
Abstract
Deep-sea mining of polymetallic nodules are expected to produce serious impact on benthic ecosystem due to removal of nodules, sediments and associated fauna by means of collector, and subsequently, by the resettlement of sediment plume which may affect seabed biota outside mining tracks through blanketing, smothering and feeding interruption. The scale and magnitude of the exact impact of commercial operations is not known at present, but its assessment strongly required acquisition of the adequate environmental baseline information. During the past two decades, IOM carried out a total of 20 research cruises in the eastern part of Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) with purpose to obtain essential data and information on polymetallic nodules and to prepare for future development their deposits. Whilst evaluating the nodule coverage at particular station from both seafloor photographs and box-core recoveries it was ascertain that the ground-truth data plotted against the photo data indicated substantial differences between two methods. Understanding of this phenomenon has not only the methodology meaning related to the efficiency of the using photoprofiling techniques during exploration of nodules, but also it could be of environmental importance because the similarity between natural sediment blanketing occurrence in studied area and expected re-deposition and blanketing of sediments which will be disturbed during mining operations.
Citation
APA:
(2011) Alteration In The Nodule Coverage Due To Biogenic Disturbance In The IOM Exploration Area: Some Environmental ConcernsMLA: Alteration In The Nodule Coverage Due To Biogenic Disturbance In The IOM Exploration Area: Some Environmental Concerns. International Marine Minerals Society, 2011.