|
HARBOR BRANCH - OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE
[ RETURN TO MAIN LIST ]
[ CONTACT PRESS RELATIONS ]
[ EMAIL STORY ]
[ PRINT PAGE ]
Drug Discovery Team to Explore Newly Discovered Deep-sea Reefs
PRESS RELEASE
Distributed May 17, 2006
Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution
FORT PIERCE -- Last December, University of Miami researchers using
advanced sonar techniques discovered new deepwater reef sites 2,000 to
2,900 feet deep in the Straits of Florida between Miami and Bimini. From
May 22-30, Harbor Branch scientists will work with Miami colleagues to
explore these areas for the first time using Harbor Branch's
Johnson-Sea-Link II submersible. A primary goal of the expedition will
be to search for and collect marine organisms from the reefs to test
them for the presence of new chemical compounds with the potential to
treat human diseases such as cancer and Alzheimer's. The expedition is
being funded largely by the State of Florida's "Florida Oceans
Initiative."
"We've found incredible and surprising diversity at other deepwater
reefs near Miami and Bimini, and some promising potential disease
treatments, so we're very excited about the chance to explore these new
areas," says Amy Wright, director of the Harbor Branch Division of
Biomedical Marine Research.
Researchers have suspected since the 1970s that deep reefs lay
undiscovered between Miami and Bimini because pieces of reef-building
corals had been brought up using surface-operated dredge and grab
sampling equipment. However, just as the vast majority of the ocean
remains poorly mapped and unexplored--even off Miami--these potentially
important areas remained unseen.
In December of 2005, as part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administrations Ocean Exploration program, University of Miami
researchers, led by geophysicist Mark Grasmueck and geologist Gergor
Eberli, began mapping deepwater habitats off Miami and Bimini using an
autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) equipped with advanced sonar
technology. AUVs operate without a tether to the surface and are
pre-programmed to independently perform tasks. AUVs have been frequently
used in oil exploration and also in a variety of other research programs
for mapping purposes, but the Miami researchers believe this is the
first time an AUV has been used to map deepwater coral reefs.
Miami's December AUV work revealed what appears to be an extensive
system of steep slopes and mounds as high as 350 feet, all of which are
likely to harbor a wide array of sponges, corals, fish, and other
animals. A camera developed at the University of Miami allowed
researchers to get an enticing glimpse of the bottom, but until
researchers make it to the seafloor in the submersible they will not be
able to determine the extent and biological diversity of the newly
discovered reefs. Harbor Branch has discovered a number of other new
deepwater reefs in Florida waters in recent years that play important
ecological roles, but has never before had the chance to explore this
area.
From May 22-26, the team will be working at sites on the Bahamas side of
the Straits of Florida, about 10 miles from Bimini. From May 27-30 they
will be on the Florida side, beginning about 20 miles out from Miami,
though all the reefs are part of the same geological system. After a
quick personnel and equipment turnaround, Harbor Branch researchers will
return to the Miami area on a separate expedition from May 31 to June 9
to conduct the first in depth survey of deep reef areas in the region to
better assess the ecological importance of the reefs and to identify
factors responsible for their incredible diversity.
Researchers typically have to spend hours using a ship depth sounder to
map an area before determining where to do submersible dives because
maps detailed enough to show the telltale mounds and other features of
deepwater reefs simply do not exist for the bulk of the seafloor. With
such little information available, Grasmueck compares typical seafloor
exploration to arriving on the bottom of the Grand Canyon at night with
a flashlight and then attempting to ascertain the significance and
topography of the whole canyon based on small swaths revealed by the
flashlight. The Miami AUV work has instead made it possible to choose
dive sites likely to be vibrant reef areas ahead of time, all with an
understanding of the full system being explored.
The expedition will have two main goals. First, the team will use the
submersible to explore those seafloor areas that appear most promising
based on their sonar map contours. As this "ground truthing" work
progresses, the team will be able to better predict correlations between
map data and biodiversity on the bottom. Ultimately this will allow them
to more accurately assess the ecological importance of the entire area,
not just those small swaths observed from the submersible.
During each submersible dive, Harbor Branch experts will be collecting
samples of organisms such as sponges and corals that will be tested to
determine if they, or microorganisms living within them, produce
chemicals with pharmaceutical potential. A key goal is to find and
collect organisms that have never been seen, which happens on almost
every one of the Harbor Branch team's expeditions. Other organisms will
also be collected because even well known species can produce different
and potentially important chemicals depending on the depth, temperature,
and location at which they are found.
Harbor Branch's quest for drugs from the sea began in the early 1980s
and has led to the collection of tens of thousands of marine organism
samples and the identification of a number of promising potential drugs
now in various stages of development for treating cancer, Alzheimer's,
malaria, AIDS and other ailments.
For more information about the expedition, or to request photos or
b-roll, please contact Mark Schrope at 772-216-0390 or schrope@hboi.edu.
For information about the University of Miami's AUV research, please
contact Ivy Kupec, Communications Director at the University of Miami's
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, 305-421-4704 or
ikupec@rsmas.miami.edu.
[ RETURN TO MAIN LIST ]
[ CONTACT PRESS RELATIONS ]
[ EMAIL STORY ]
[ PRINT PAGE ]
HARBOR BRANCH Oceanographic Institution was founded in Ft. Pierce, Fla., in 1971 to support the exploration and conservation
of the world's oceans. The institution has held to this mission and grown into one of the world's leading oceanographic
institutions with a 500-acre campus, over 200 personnel, and a fleet of sophisticated research ships and submersibles.
|