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How oceanographers have recruited seals to help with research in Antarctica

A Weddell seal with a CTD tag attached on the head. (Nobuo Kokubun (NIPR)/Handout) A Weddell seal with a CTD tag attached on the head. (Nobuo Kokubun (NIPR)/Handout)
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Researchers working in Antarctica kept running into the same problem: the continental ice shelves, nearly impossible to navigate by boat.

That鈥檚 why oceanographers have turned to a more agile data collection process -- seals, wearing sensors on their heads.

The ice shelves of Antarctica are an extremely diverse environment thanks to the large amounts of nutrients generated by the interactions between ocean, land and ice shelf, .

In order to study the biodiversity closer, researchers have been using oceanographic data logging equipment on animals to get readings on conductivity, temperature and depth of the ocean.

The study about animal-born investigation techniques and their preliminary findings was published in October in the journal .

Previous studies using instruments strapped to migrating southern elephant seals and resident Weddell seals鈥攁 deep diving predator鈥斺渉ad shown some interesting physical processes in Antarctic areas,鈥 said lead study author Nobuo Kokubun, an assistant professor with Japan鈥檚 National Institute of Polar Research. 鈥淏ut even here, there has barely been anything investigating coastal areas covered by landfast ice.鈥

In order to record their data, the researchers attached satellite relay equipment with glue to the heads of eight Weddell seals, from March to September 2017, and were able to determine new aspects of the Antarctic ocean鈥檚 seasonal changes and the seal鈥檚 hunting habits.

Researchers hope to continue their use of seals to explore and log data about the Antarctic coastal marine ecosystem. 

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