Marine Research & Exploration partners for intelligent ocean management.
Our mission is to explore and document the world’s oceans to support their conservation and stewardship. With assets of innovative technology, proprietary data collection and analysis, MARE informs and collaborates with government, academic, science and community-based organizations to affect change. We specialize in long term ocean monitoring projects that track change and progress of management plans and environmental factors; our focus is the biodiverse continental shelf to depths of 1,000 meters.
O U R I M P A C T
3,910
EXPLORED
2,495,000
ORGANISMS IDENTIFIED
437
SITES VISITED
287,135
PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN
1,678
DIVES COMPLETED
Letter from the Executive Director
Explore. Discover. Protect.
Explore. Discover. Protect.
It’s time to take the gloves off when it comes to climate change. Oceans take the brunt of climate impact. Our seas absorb 90% of excess heat, and sequester 30% of the carbon emitted from burning fossil fuels, all while delivering the oxygen in every other breath you take. California offers a glimmer of hope, pioneering a new type of ocean management for over 15 years with promising results. We currently benefit from 124 marine reserves covering ~16% of state waters. MARE has been a vital partner to marine resource managers from the beginning, and has provided evidence of successes and failures in these reserves. MARE continues to do more of what we do best: explore, discover, and protect our ocean. Looking ahead, we will export our assets and know-how to support Hawai’i’s bold “30 by 30” marine management initiative and work with strategic partners to ensure a resilient, biodiverse ocean for future generations.
Since our founding, generous and committed donors like you have enabled new blue technologies, survey of thousands of kilometers of deep sea floor, discovery of new coral species, and protection of large coral gardens. We work hard to demonstrate what a strong tool intelligent ocean management is for our ocean’s health. Annual reports are one way to showcase strides made with your support, and we have highlighted a few exciting achievements in this one. I hope you make the ocean one of your top three priorities. The oceans are the lungs, heart and thermostat of the planet and we have the ability to make real change. We are at a crossroads of knowledge and technology, the time to intelligently manage our oceans is now. Best wishes,
2019 HIGHLIGHTS
Blue Parks
California has an invaluable string of pearls along its coast – a network of blue parks that serve to protect and restore our ocean’s health. This is the second largest network of marine reserves in the world, stretching over 1,000 square kilometers, and aims to sustain biodiversity in nearshore marine ecosystems. Marine protected areas (MPAs) are a promising model of conservation creating a more resilient ecosystem. MARE is leading the exploration and documentation of California’s deep water areas. Now that we have baseline data for the entire coast, California’s Department of Fish and Wildlife has engaged MARE in a new phase of long-term monitoring along the coast to track progress and impact of the MPA network. We will continue data collection into 2020; analyzed data will be integrated in a comprehensive statewide management review of the MPAs. This rare snapshot of the entire coast of California will help ocean managers make informed decisions to maintain a healthy, sustainable ocean.
Deep Sea Coral Discovery
Deep sea corals, the old growth forests of the ocean, support rich and abundant communities of marine life. The waters off the US West Coast still contain large colonies of corals and sponges, along with the rich biomass that depend upon them. MARE and our partners aim to find these communities before they’re destroyed. These critical habitats are vulnerable to bottom trawling, which can destroy an ecosystem that has been in place for millennia. This year, the most extensive ban on bottom trawling became law, swayed by compelling MARE video, and testimony by Heirs to our Oceans, NOAA and Oceana. Fishing groups and environmentalists agreed to protect more than 140,000 square miles of seafloor habitat along the West Coast, including gardens of lush coral around the Farallon Islands. Last year, MARE worked with the California Academy of Sciences and NOAA’s Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary on an expedition that resulted in the discovery of a new species of deep sea coral. This yellow octocoral has been named Chromoplexaura cordellbankensis in honor of Cordell Bank. We have since documented it in various locations on the West Coast. This discovery serves to remind us how much more we can learn about our poorly understood deep sea and how critical exploration continues to be.
DISCOVERY DAY
Each year, MARE offers an opportunity for our generous supporters to don their citizen scientist hats and join us for a day at sea: Discovery Day. This day is filled to the gills with hands-on exploration and discovery, and an opportunity for guests to see their investment in action. We typically plan this day around expeditions out of Santa Barbara in the Channel Islands so that guests can actively participate in our work.“I was amazed at the colorful corals we saw at depth, along with all the rockfish and lingcod.
“It was a real privilege to drive the ROV around the bottom. MARE’s work is a remarkable example of how blue tech is being used to help protect California’s precious marine resources and reserves.” – Michael Sutton, Executive Director Goldman Environmental Foundation.
On the Horizon
Aloha Challange
Aloha Challange
Hawaii’s coral reefs and nearshore waters are a critical element of both the state’s economy and culture. To preserve this resource, the state enacted the Sustainable Hawaii Initiative to effectively manage 30% of local ocean waters by 2030. Though much attention is given to Hawaii’s famous shallow coral reefs, deep water corals are as much of a priority to understand and protect. Found below SCUBA depth, mesophotic corals provide an equally important marine habitat that supports a variety of life, including commercially important fish species. Deep water marine regions in the ‘Au’au channel have been shown to be some of the most extensive and densely populated coral reefs in Hawaii.
In 2020 MARE will be crossing the Pacific to Hawaii bringing our technology and expertise to this “30 by 30” initiative. MARE will augment existing datasets with deeper water surveys, locating hotspots of biodiversity and abundance that divers cannot access. Our project helps ensure that Hawaii’s long term marine management plan is based on accurate and credible information and aligns with priorities of the Sustainable Hawaii Initiative.
Mahalo to the following supporters :The Dorrance Family Foundation . Harold K L Castle Foundation .
Atherton Family Foundation . Peter J Davis Family Foundation
Intelligent Ocean Management
THE TIME TO INTELLIGENTLY MANAGE OUR OCEANS IS NOW.
SUPPORT A HEALTHY BLUE PLANET. INVEST IN OCEAN EXPLORATION.
STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES | JULY 1, 2018 – JUNE 30, 2019
OCEAN CHAMPIONS | Reflects donations received July 1, 2018 – June 30, 2019