Evaluating Benthic Community Disturbance And Succession Following Simulated Manganese-Nodule Mining In The Equatorial Pacific

International Marine Minerals Society
Fred C. Dobbs
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
2
File Size:
60 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1992

Abstract

To effectively manage the potential environmental impacts of deep-sea mining of manganese nodules, we need to know substantially more about the effects of sediment redeposition on abyssal communities and the time scales of recovery from such effects. As an initial step towards a predictive understanding of mining impacts on abyssal benthos, we are conducting a series of biological studies within the framework of the Benthic Impact Experiment (BIE). Mining operations will cause resuspension of sediments across extensive areas of the abyssal Pacific Ocean. The resultant plumes likely will produce redeposition layers, ranging from a few sediment grains in thickness to > 1 cm, over thousands of square kilometers of the seafloor. The impact of such redeposition on abyssal benthic communities is exceedingly difficult to predict. While there has been speculation that redeposition of 1 mm or less will exert deleterious effects, there has been very little testing, and the BIE will provide the first in situ test of redeposition impacts. In a series of cruises before and after controlled resedimentation, we are collecting biological samples to determine the undisturbed state of the ecosystem, the immediate effects of disturbance, and the time-course of recovery resulting from quantified levels of resedimentation.
Citation

APA: Fred C. Dobbs  (1992)  Evaluating Benthic Community Disturbance And Succession Following Simulated Manganese-Nodule Mining In The Equatorial Pacific

MLA: Fred C. Dobbs Evaluating Benthic Community Disturbance And Succession Following Simulated Manganese-Nodule Mining In The Equatorial Pacific. International Marine Minerals Society, 1992.

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