The
West Coast & Polar Regions Undersea Research Center operates
in the waters offshore of California, Oregon, Washington, Alaska,
and the Arctic and Antarctic. Fisheries within the region are of
major economic importance, comprising over 65% of the U.S. total
resource by weight and approximately 40% by value. The region also
contains active tectonic margins with earthquake-producing subduction
zones and fault zones; cold seeps and gas hydrate deposits; submarine
canyons; seamounts; and volcanically active mid-ocean ridges. To
support research of this geologically unique and biologically diverse
environment, the WCPR Center leases manned submersibles, shallow-
and deep-diving ROVs, and other research equipment, and funds SCUBA
operations.
Highlights
- Pioneered use of benthic habitat mapping and new interdisciplinary
research techniques to study relationships between fish populations
and the geology and ecology of benthic habitats on the West Coast
- Initiated and supports the multi-agency Heceta Bank rockfish
habitat study off the coast of Oregon
- Discovered huge mating aggregations of Tanner crabs (Chiniak
Bay, AK), a commercially important species
- Baseline study of the Cowcod Conservation Areas (southern CA),
the largest marine protected area off the West Coast, to evaluate
whether protection accomplishes its intended purpose of groundfish
species recovery
WCPR
Center supports development and testing of new instruments and techniques,
such as:
- video/datalogger systems mounted on marine mammals
- laser line scan mapping for seafloor habitat mapping
- fuel cell technology applications at cold methane seeps
- pressurized recovery system and pressurized thermal gradient
chamber to study live hydrothermal vent tubeworms
- ROV-mounted Raman spectroscopy to study crystal structure and
composition of seafloor methane hydrate
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