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4.7: Benthic Landers

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    31608
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    Not all robotic craft operate in the water column. A group of platforms known as benthic landers, nicknamed ocean elevators, sink to the seafloor. Once landed, they carry out any number of observations, such as imaging, remote sensing of ocean properties, sample collection, or experimentation. Landers have proved particularly useful for studying submarine canyons, where episodic events such as underwater mudslides occur. They’re also perfect for observations in deep oceanic trenches that are largely inaccessible to other craft. The deepest-diving landers, the hadal landers, deploy baited cameras and traps to attract, film, and even capture deep-sea organisms. In 2014 oceanographers used landers to catch a snailfish, the deepest known vertebrate, collected at 26,135 feet (7,966 m) in the Mariana Trench (Gerringer et al. 2017). In 2017 a JAMSTEC lander filmed a snailfish at 26,831 feet (8,178 m), the deepest observation of any fish to date (JAMSTEC 2017). Hadal landers have also been used to study sediments and oxygen consumption in oceanic trenches (Lumberg et al. 2018; Glud et al. 2021). Though less sexy than propelled vehicles, landers offer one of the most cost-effective means for making observations in the deep ocean (e.g., Giddens et al. 2021; Du et al. 2023).


    This page titled 4.7: Benthic Landers is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.