Published September 16, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The London Workshop on the Biogeography and Connectivity of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone

  • 1. Natural History Museum
  • 2. Uni Research
  • 3. Deutsches Zentrum für Marine Biodiversitätsforschung (DZMB)
  • 4. Senckenberg Research Institute and Nature Museum
  • 5. Senckenberg Museum
  • 6. Deep-sea Environment Laboratory, Ifremer
  • 7. Marine Biology, Ghent University
  • 8. Universidade de Aveiro
  • 9. IMAR-Institute of Marine Research
  • 10. University of Łódź
  • 11. National Oceanography Centre
  • 12. University of Hawaii at Manoa
  • 13. Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences
  • 14. University of Plymouth
  • 15. UK Seabed Resources Ltd
  • 16. International Seabed Authority

Description

Recent years have seen a rapid increase in survey and sampling expeditions to the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) abyssal plain, a vast area of the central Pacific that is currently being actively explored for deep-sea minerals (ISA, 2016). Critical to the development of evidence-based environmental policy in the CCZ are data on the biogeography and connectivity of species at a CCZ-regional level.

The London Workshop on the Biogeography and Connectivity of the CCZ was convened to support the integration and synthesis of data from European Union (EU) CCZ projects, supported by the EU Managing Impacts of Deep-Sea Resource Exploitation (MIDAS) and EU Joint Programming Initiative Healthy and Productive Seas and Oceans (JPI Oceans) projects. The London Workshop had three clear goals: (1) To explore, review and synthesise the latest molecular biogeography and connectivity data from across recent CCZ cruises from both contractor and academia-funded projects; (2) To develop complementary and collaborative institutional and program-based academic publication plans to avoid duplication of effort and ensure maximum collaborative impact; (3) To plan a joint synthetic data publication highlighting key results from a range of planned molecular biogeography/connectivity publications. 32 participants attended the workshop at the Natural History Museum in London from 10-12 May 2016. Presentations and discussions are summarised in this report covering (1) overviews of current CCZ environmental projects, (2) policy and industry perspectives, (3) synthesis of DNA taxonomy and biogeography studies, (4) summaries of the latest population genetic studies, (5) summaries of the latest broader morphological context, (6) an overview of publication and proposal plans to maximise collaborative opportunities and finally a series of workshop recommendations.

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Additional details

Funding

MIDAS – Managing Impacts of Deep-seA reSource exploitation 603418
European Commission