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Miami, Florida, USA - Oceanographer
Craig Randall Smith, Ph.D., has won a
prestigious Pew Marine Conservation Fellowship for his plan to
design
marine protected areas in the Pacific Ocean and thereby help
conserve the
delicate and diverse ecosystems of seamounts and deep-sea plains
in the
face of fishing and future mining.
Smith, a professor in the
Department of
Oceanography, University of Hawaii at Manoa, is one of only five
2003
recipients of Pew Marine Conservation Fellowships-the world's
most
esteemed awards honoring and investing in applied ocean conservation
science and outreach. Each Pew Fellow receives $150,000 over
three years
to carry out innovative, interdisciplinary projects related to
marine
conservation. The Pew Fellows Program in Marine Conservation
is a program
of the Pew Institute for Ocean Science at the University of Miami
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, USA.
The deep seas of the Pacific harbor ecosystems of extraordinary
biodiversity and fragility in the form of seamounts (underwater
mountains)
and the relatively flat seabottom expanses known as abyssal plains.
These
communities typically are easily disrupted by-and very slow to
recover
from-physical disturbances. Yet deep seafloor ecosystems are being
increasingly impacted by human activities such as bottom fishing
(trawling) and waste disposal.
Some Pacific deep-sea areas also
contain
deposits of manganese nodules and other metals such as nickel,
copper, and
cobalt. These nodules could soon become important commercial
sources, as
land-based sources become depleted and underwater mining technologies
advance. A single mining operation could strip as much as 700
square kilometers of seafloor per year, yielding near total faunal
mortality.
Recovery from such disturbances would require decades for soft-sediment
dwelling fauna, and perhaps a million years for life forms that
are
dependent on the nodule substrate.
To preserve biodiversity in these delicate and important ecosystems,
Smith
says, "it is imperative to create a system of marine protected
areas that
will be based on sound science, off limits to fishing and mining,
and well
integrated into the international legal framework." Smith
and his
colleague Anthony Koslow, a world expert in seamount diversity,
will
collect and integrate information about the biological characteristics
and
habitat distribution of western Pacific seamounts. They will collaborate
with research vessels to perform fieldwork to supplement the existing
data
and then will perform molecular studies on the flora and fauna
collected.
Smith will also research manganese nodules that lie on the ocean
floor
area between the Clarion and Clipperton Zone Fractures-roughly
west of
Baja California. Working with leading scientists, he will collect
fauna
from research expeditions and will integrate data from the scientific
literature and the expeditions into a single taxonomic database
under the
leadership of the International Seabed Authority. As the project
progresses, Smith and his colleagues will convene a workshop of
experts to
review the data and design marine protected areas for Pacific seamounts
and the Clarion and Clipperton Zone nodule region.
Smith has carried out some of the most important and innovative
work in
deep-sea biology over the past several decades. In addition to
his work on the ecosystem implications of deep-sea mining, Smith has recently
performed pioneering research about the environments surrounding
decaying whale skeletons on the ocean floor. He is also an expert in deep-sea
sediments and the fauna of invasive Hawaiian mangroves.
Smith has been an organizer, invited speaker, and participant
in scores of professional marine meetings and conferences, including the International
Seabed Authority, the National Center for Ecological Analysis and
Synthesis, the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and the Universities
of Oslo (Norway), Aberdeen (Scotland), and Southampton (England). He has
appeared on numerous national television and radio broadcasts in the USA,
Canada, Korea, and Europe, including BBC's 'Blue Planet' series The Deep
in 2001-2002. In addition to having published upwards of 70 papers
in professional journals such as Nature, Deep-Sea Research II, BioScience,
Marine Ecology Progress Series, and Environmental Conservation,
Smith's work has appeared in Science, New Scientist, National Geographic
Magazine, Wildlife Conservation, and many other popular science publications.
In 1988, Smith joined the faculty of the University of Hawaii,
where he has organized international projects to address the probability
of species extinctions from deep-sea mining. He also has worked extensively
with the International Seabed Authority to predict and manage the environmental
impacts of nodule mining in the abyssal Pacific.
Smith completed his undergraduate work in biological science at
Michigan State University and received his Ph.D. in biological oceanography
from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California,
San Diego. Subsequently he was a postdoctoral scholar at the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution, where he explored colonization processes
in intertidal communities. He then spent four years at the University
of Washington exploring the effects of natural disturbance, mining,
and radioactive waste disposal on deep-sea communities.
 Contact Information for Craig Smith:
Department of Oceanography
University of Hawaii
1000 Pope Rd
Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
For background information on these issues, see: Glover, A. G. and C. R. Smith. The deep-sea floor ecosystem: Current
status and prospects of anthropogenic change by the year 2025. Environmental Conservation 30: 219-241, 2003.

Information
about the Pew Fellows Program in Marine Conservation and the Pew
Institute for Ocean Science
The Pew Fellows Program in Marine Conservation is a program of
the Pew Institute for Ocean Science in partnership with the University of Miami.
The Pew Institute for Ocean Science strives to undertake, sponsor,
and promote world-class scientific activity aimed at protecting the
world's oceans and the species that inhabit them. The Pew Fellows Program
annually awards five fellowships of $150,000 each that contribute to advancing
solutions to the oceans' most pressing problems. The program seeks
to foster greater public understanding of the direct and crucial relationship
between life in the sea and life on land. By supporting the ingenuity
and leadership of its distinguished Fellows, the program calls awareness
to the critical state of our oceans and demonstrates viable solutions
to someof the world's most urgent conservation challenges. For more information,
visit the website of the Pew Fellows Program in Marine Conservation
(http://www.pewmarine.org) or the Pew Institute
(http://www.pewoceanscience.org). |