Submerged beneath the waves off the Central Coast of British Columbia, a specialized piece of equipment resembles a sort of scientific Christmas tree. The topper star is a round buoy, which is suspended in the water beneath the ocean’s surface. Scientific instruments hang like ornaments along the heavy line down to a depth of 140 meters. One day in early July, scientists will finally get to open a year’s worth of data presents.
Last year, Fisheries and Oceans Canada researchers from the Institute of Ocean Sciences dropped this particular mooring—a line of oceanography instruments and sensors attached to an anchor—nine kilometers northwest of the Hakai Institute’s ecological observatory on Calvert Island. Unlike other ocean sensors that stream data back to scientists in real time, this mooring, dubbed HAK1-A, needs to be picked up to access the information.
On July 8, the Canadian Coast Guard vessel John P. Tully returned to pick up the mooring and download the oceanography data collected by the instruments over the past year.
The coast guard vessel sent a specific sound frequency down the water column to the acoustic release mechanism and the mooring’s instrument line floated to the surface. They grabbed the pick-up line and hauled it up.
“Examining these datasets will be interesting,” says Hakai scientist Jennifer Jackson. The instruments on the mooring measure a whole suite of variables including three-dimensional ocean currents, pH, temperature, salinity, and sounds produced both by humans and marine creatures.