In the depths of the oceans, human activities are beginning to take their toll
June 7, 2017 — Imagine
sinking into the deepest parts of the Central Pacific Ocean, somewhere between
Mexico and Hawaii. Watch as the water turns from clear to blue to dark blue to
black. And then continue on for another 15,000 feet (4,600 meters) to the
seafloor — roughly the distance from the peak of California’s Mount Whitney to
the bottom of nearby Death Valley.
“As soon as you start to descend, all of the wave
action and bouncing goes away and it’s like you’re just floating and then you
sink really slowly and watch the light fade out through the windows and then
you really are in another world,” says Erik Cordes, a researcher at Temple
University and frequent visitor to the deep ocean.
Finally, you come to a stop 12,000 feet (3,700
meters) below the last bits of light from the surface. The water here is
strangely viscous yet remarkably transparent, and the light from your
flashlight extends for hundreds of yards. You are in the heart of the
Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone, a region of the ocean seafloor roughly the
size of the United States, populated by colorless invertebrates adapted in
astounding ways to the sparse, crushing conditions found here.
And all around you — as far as the eye can’t see —
are small, spherical rocks. Varying from microscopic
to the size of a volleyball, they look like something stolen from the set
of “Gremlins” or maybe “Invasion of the Body Snatchers.”
And they’re worth millions. Because inside these
mysterious little eggs are untouched stores of copper,
titanium, cobalt and especially manganese — crucial for making anything
from the steel in your car’s frame to the circuitry that tells you how much gas
is left in it. Some metals exist in larger quantities here than on all the continents
of the world — and you had better believe they have caught the eye of mining
companies.
The deep ocean, which in some places extends farther
below Earth’s surface than Mt. Everest stands above, is facing threats from
humans despite its remoteness.
It’s hard to draw a line exactly where the deep
ocean starts. Starting at about 650 feet (200 meters), there’s not enough light
to support photosynthesis, and at around 3,000 feet (1,000 meters) there’s no
light at all. From there to the deepest spot, at the bottom of the
36,000-foot-deep (11,000-meter-deep) Mariana Trench between Japan and Papua New
Guinea (deep enough to hold Mount Everest with New Hampshire’s Mount Washington
stuck on top of it) is loosely defined as the “deep sea.”
However it’s defined, the deep sea today is a place
of change. Human activities already are affecting it — and are poised, as these
mineral stores suggest — to radically affect it even more in the decades to
come. Attention we pay and decisions we make now could make all the difference
in its fate.
Mining the Depths
The mineral riches of this deep ocean are vast and
nearly untouched for now. But that’s changing as new technologies are allowing
humans to access ever-deeper parts of the seafloor.
Current mining strategies break down along two
rough categories. First is nodule mining — gathering up those bizarre seafloor
billiard balls that have slowly collected minerals over the centuries as they
trickled down like rain from above or seeped up from below and congregated
around some central particle like rock candy around a string. There is no
industry standard for sweeping up nodules so far below the surface — about 4,000
to 6,000 meters (13,000 to 20,000 feet) — though companies have proposed
ideas as varied as deepwater vacuum cleaners and massive trawlers dragging
across the seafloor. One 1985
study estimated 550 billion metric tons (610 billion tons) of nodules in
the sea.
Nodules like these found on the deep ocean floor
contain a variety of valuable minerals. Photo courtesy of Krypton Ocean Group
The second form of mining is targeted around sulfur
vents and other types of seeps. These operations would be in shallower water —
4,000 to 12,000 feet (1,200 to 3,700 meters) — and look more like traditional
mining operations scraping sulfur, phosphorus or precious metals from the sides
of underwater ridges.
So far, all of these projects are theoretical. Most
of the permits currently granted for deep-sea mining are for nodules, but the
first ones to actually break ground are likely to be around ocean vents.
Nautilus Minerals, a Canadian company working off the coast of Papua New
Guinea, has begun implementing a project to mine gold and copper at a ridge
about 5,000 feet (2,000 meters) below the surface and in April began receiving
equipment.
Company executives have pointed out that they have
passed environmental impact reviews and that their project is friendlier
to the Earth than other mining operations because the ore is so rich they
can get more of it by disturbing less of the soil. But scientists point out
that much
remains unknown about what deep-water strip mining will do to the environment.
In the case of ocean vents, there are some animals that may live only in that
spot, and a single mine could wipe out entire species. In addition, both styles
of mining would kick up potentially toxic plumes of ultra-fine sand that could
travel hundreds of miles through a part of the ocean that has remained
undisturbed for thousands of years.
“They’re going into new environments with a lot of
environmental impacts,” says Lisa Levin, an expert in the deep sea at Scripps
Institute of Oceanography. “We are going to lose stuff before we ever discover
it.”
Climate Change and the Deep Ocean
Because life in the deep ocean is more sensitive to
change than in the shallows, the smallest shift in pH, oxygen or temperature
can have huge effects. Thus, one of the most serious concerns about the deep
ocean is climate change.
According to Andrew Thurber, an assistant professor
at Oregon State University, a quarter to a third of the CO2 humans
have released has gone to the deep ocean. Some of it gets absorbed into the
water itself or turns to particulate, thus lowering the pH and oxygen levels,
and some is buried and turned to stone, where it effectively neutralized and
stored for millions of years.
A quarter to a third of
the CO2 humans have released has gone to the deep ocean.Ironically,
the deep ocean is one of the greatest mitigators of climate change as well,
since it absorbs a massive portion of the Earth’s heat and CO2. In
fact, one
recent study showed that the ocean is absorbing phenomenally more heat now
than ever before — about the same amount between 1997 and 2015 as it had in the
previous 132 years. As a result, scientists are already seeing incremental
temperature rise in the deep sea. Though less than at the surface, changes down
there tend to represent more permanent ocean shifts.
Trickle Down Effects
Then there is chemical pollution. While mining the
deep sea might be new, polluting it is not. Recent studies have found toxic
terrestrial chemicals like PCBs and PBDEs in the tissues of animals living
in the deepest places on Earth. In fact, where once scientists assumed the deep
ocean was rather isolated from the surface, new studies have shown that the two
are closely connected and that material can pass quickly into the depths.
The most spectacular example of this was the aftermath
of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill on the Gulf of Mexico. It was assumed
at the time that much of the millions of barrels of oil released by the faulty
offshore drilling rig would float; they did not. It was assumed that the
dispersant would neutralize the oil; in fact it was more toxic to
deep sea corals than the oil itself.
Brittle starfish cling to coral coated with petroleum
residue in the wake of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Photo courtesy of
Lophelia II 2010, NOAA OER, and BOEMRE, copyright WHOI
“The probability of an accident goes up with depth,”
and thus the potential for harming ocean life, Cordes says of deep-sea
operations. “The deeper you go, the more stable the environment is; the more
stable it is, the less those organisms can deal with changes.”
Cordes studies all sorts of pollution effects
beyond the reach of sunlight. He and colleagues published pioneering
research looking at the first evidence of acidification in the deep ocean
in the Gulf of Mexico and off the coast of Norway.
He says it’s easy to think of the deep sea as some
kind of wasteland, while in fact it’s brimming with life.
“People don’t realize that there are massive coral
reefs all over the Gulf of Mexico, there’s corals right off shore in
California, there’s corals up in New England,” he says.
To overload this system or tinker with it at all is
to play with fire.
“If we put something in the deep ocean, we pretty
much can’t clean it up,” Thurber says.
And we can’t depend on the animals down there to
adapt and clean up after us as they often do at the surface. Cordes says
microbes at the surface can double their numbers in 12 hours; in the deep ocean
it takes half a year. Because the generation time is so much slower, Thurber
says, it takes decades for carbon-munching deep water microbes to battle, say,
higher methane levels than the days or weeks it would take critters at the
surface. Thus, our decisions around greenhouse gas emissions at the surface
have now affected every ecosystem on Earth.
Permanent Decline
And it’s not just the microbes that grow slowly —
fish in the deep ocean also take their time. As a result, fishing is another
threat to the deep ocean. With most normal, surface fishing practices, it’s
possible to manage a population such that what you take out is the same as what
the population can replenish. But because fish found far from the surface grow slowly,
some scientists have gone so far as to say that deep sea fishing is more
analogous to mining than to fishing.
Deep-ocean fish like common slimehead (aka orange
roughy) grow slowly, making them easy to overexploit. Photo courtesy of NOAA
Okeanos Explorer Program
The classic case of this is the common slimehead. The
slimehead is a delicious, bulky, dark red fish found from 180 to 1,500 meters
(590 to 4,920 feet) below the surface in many of the world’s oceans. In the
late 1970s, concerned that cod was on a permanent decline, seafood marketers in
New Zealand began pushing slimehead under the more palatable name, orange
roughy, because it turns orange after death.
Why this seemed like a good idea is a mystery.
Slimehead spawn only
4 percent of the number of eggs as cod and take
20 to 30 years to reach maturity (rather than about two for cod). Within a
couple decades the Australian government started reducing allowable harvest and
then closing fisheries altogether as they tried to figure out catch limits that
wouldn’t decimate the creature.
Some scientists now say there is no such number.
One team estimated The New Zealand Ministry of Fisheries in 2009 estimated that
a single 40-square-mile (100-square-kilometer) deep ocean fishery in the
Pacific can only sustainably produce about 200 kilograms (400 pounds) of
product per year. That’s about 57 adult slimehead. But that particular fishery
produces 8,000 metric tons (9,000 tons) of slimehead per year. A similar story
is playing out in other slimehead fisheries across the world, as well as other
deepwater creatures like grenadiers, sharks and toothfish (otherwise known as
Chilean seabass).
Direct Connection
In many ways, the deep sea truly is a new world
waiting to be explored. But in our rush to exploit that new world, unless we
think carefully about the impacts, we may find ourselves harming it before we
even understand it — with implications for ourselves.
“[The deep oceans] are supporting these fish that
we are depending on for food, they’re helping to recycle nutrients that come
back to shallow waters, fuel the productivity of the ocean, produce half of the
oxygen we breathe,” says Cordes. “We are directly connected to them.”





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