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Rutgers Researchers Observe Unusual Ocean Conditions

January 10, 2024 — Two Rutgers University scientists recently discussed the possible implications of their findings last summer of low dissolved oxygen and pH off the New Jersey coast, which concurred with numerous reported mortalities of fish, lobsters and crabs.

Grace Saba and Josh Kohut work within Rutgers’s Center for Ocean Observing Leadership, in the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences. The center, as the university notes, maintains the world’s most advanced coastal ocean observatory, with platforms consisting of satellite imagery, a radar network for surface current mapping and waves, and a fleet of long-duration autonomous underwater vehicles, called gliders, equipped with physical, chemical and biological sensors.

Saba, an associate professor, and Kohut, a professor, employed gliders to map ocean water quality measures along the coast, surface to bottom, from late April to late September 2023. As they explained, “From August through September, much of the bottom water sampled from Sandy Hook south to Tuckerton, and from nearshore to deeper depths, exhibited dissolved oxygen concentrations less than 5 mg/liter and pH values less than 7.75.

“Coast-wide, hypoxic levels of dissolved oxygen (concentrations of less than 3 mg/liter) were observed at shallower, more inshore locations. In addition to low pH measured in bottom waters, which is indicative of ocean acidification, aragonite saturation state – a relevant metric for biological impacts of ocean acidification – was calculated to be less than 1 in several locations. Normal, more optimal levels in seawater typically include dissolved oxygen concentrations of more than 7 mg/liter, pH of 8.1, and aragonite saturation states of more than 3.”

Read the full article at the Sand Paper

Shell, EDF Offshore Wind Venture Teams With Rutgers

June 10, 2019 — Atlantic Shores Offshore Wind LLC – a 50/50 joint venture between Shell New Energies US LLC and EDF Renewables North America – has signed a memorandum of understanding with New Jersey-based Rutgers University to advance ocean research and monitoring in support of offshore wind development.

The five-year cooperative agreement, which will initiate this summer, will help bolster ongoing efforts at the Rutgers Center for Ocean Observing Leadership (RUCOOL). Together, Atlantic Shores and RUCOOL will focus on advancing approaches to collecting and analyzing meteorological, oceanographic and marine bioacoustic data. The work will build upon efforts RUCOOL is already undertaking in partnership with the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU).

The Atlantic Shorts joint venture formed in December 2018 to co-develop a 183,353-acre lease area located approximately 8-20 miles off the New Jersey coast between Atlantic City and Barnegat Light.

Data collected from both inside and outside the Atlantic Shores lease area will support Atlantic Shores’ commitment to ground its development decisions upon sound scientific research, as well as contribute to the broader regional knowledge of the Mid-Atlantic marine environment, the company says.

Read the full story at North American Wind Power

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