Europe Seabed Resource Available Online
21 Feb 2008
Marine biologists, the oil and gas industry, and anyone interested in conservation, will benefit from ready access to the vast amounts of data about intertidal and seabed habitats.
From this has come predictive mapping which will help determine the likely habitat at a location and avoid expensive field survey undertakings. Predictive mapping can also be used to evaluate large areas of seabed that would otherwise be impractical to survey.
A vital tool for the project in gathering information from hard to reach locations, has been the Saab Seaeye Tiger ROV. One such place was Stanton Bank, off the West Coast of Scotland. Here they needed to examine the habitat at the point where the rock face meets the soft seafloor. Although an acoustic survey of the area had been undertaken, they had no idea what actually lay at this difficult to access location.
The answer was to send down the free-swimming, 1,000m rated, Seaeye Tiger. They were able to manoeuvre the vehicle to the precise point of study, where its directional thrusters are powerful enough to hold the ROV steady in the currents whilst sending back high definition video film.
The ROV had been made available by the Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute (AFBI), the Northern Ireland based contributing partner to the MESH project. With many organisations competing for the resources offered by the seabed around Europe, the MESH project means they can now determine the impact of their decision by simply going to http://www.searchmesh.net/webGIS for the interactive mapping system, and zoom into the area of interest.






