MBARI Brings Up Benthic Rover Three Years After Deployment

MBARI has recovered the Benthic Rover for maintenance, after three years of nearly continuous deployment on the seafloor at Station M, located about 220 kilometers off the coast of central California, at a depth of 4,000 meters.

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Mechanical Technician John Ferreira helped build the Benthic Rover, seen here in the MBARI Machine Shop.

The Rover was built by a team of MBARI engineers and scientists, led by Ken Smith and Alana Sherman, to measure oxygen consumption of benthic, or seafloor, organisms as a way to understand the supply and demand of carbon in the ocean’s deepest waters. While the rover drives to each new site, built-in cameras survey the area and capture images of the seafloor.

Two respirometer chambers are inserted a few centimeters into the sediment to measure the amount of oxygen consumed by the organisms contained in the chamber. The respiration rate helps scientists approximate the amount of food (carbon) the seafloor community is consuming. These data combined with those measured with other nearby instruments will help scientists understand how climate change affects the ability of seafloor organisms to obtain food in the deep ocean.

Moving parts, along with cables and connectors, will be serviced or replaced as needed. One of the most important upgrades is the installation of a redesigned hibernation board that conserves battery power in the field. The Benthic Rover will be redeployed in October.

MBARI, May 01, 2014; Image: MBARI