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| Illustration showing midwater impacts of deep sea mining operations. Image credit: Dowd et al 2025 (Nature Communications) Illustration Credit: Amanda Merritt |
Scientific Frontline: "At a Glance" Summary: Deep-Sea Mining Waste Disrupts Midwater Food Webs
- Main Discovery: Waste discharged from deep-sea polymetallic nodule mining operations in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone directly threatens midwater twilight zone ecosystems by replacing nutritious natural particles with nutrient-poor sediment.
- Methodology: Researchers collected and evaluated water samples and suspended particles from a 2022 deep-sea mining trial, specifically analyzing the amino acid concentrations to determine the nutritional viability of the discharged waste plumes.
- Key Data: The discharged mining waste would negatively impact 53 percent of all zooplankton and 60 percent of micronekton, as the plumes contained significantly lower concentrations of amino acids compared to natural marine detritus.
- Significance: Introducing empty-calorie sediment into the finely tuned twilight zone dilutes the fundamental food supply, posing severe risks of cascading disruptions throughout the entire marine food web, including commercially vital Pacific tuna populations.
- Future Application: These findings deliver essential empirical data to guide the International Seabed Authority and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in establishing stringent environmental safeguards and discharge depth regulations prior to commercial mining.
- Branch of Science: Marine Biology, Oceanography, and Ecology.
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