The NWAC Rangers teaming up with IMAS, UNSW, NSW Government researchers to collect vital water temperature data.
Steph and NWAC Ranger Amanda preparing the bait bags for a day of BRUVing in the Solitary Islands Marine Park.
NWAC Rangers Anthony and Amanda deploying a BRUV in the Solitary Islands Marine Park.
The Our Marine Parks Grant team surveying the Solitary Island Marine Park.
Retrieving BRUVs from the mesophotic depths of the Solitary Islands Marine Parks.
One of our survey methods is the baited remote underwater video. There are now Australian standards for their use for monitoring marine parks.
The remotely operated vehicle or ROV or underwater drone or underwater robot, and tool for surveying habitat and fish assemblages.
An example of the mesophotic reefs inside the Solitary Islands Marine Park.
An example of the mesophotic reefs inside the Solitary Islands Marine Park.
An example of the mesophotic reefs inside the Solitary Islands Marine Park.
An example of the mesophotic reefs inside the Solitary Islands Marine Park.
A large iceberg floating in the ocean with smaller chunks of ice surrounding it.
Ice floes floating on the Arctic Ocean under a cloudy sky.
View from a ship's bow on the open ocean at sunset, with waves crashing and a cloudy sky.
Close-up of an octopus with textured reddish-brown skin and visible eyes, on a white surface.
View of a sunset over icy mountains and the ocean, taken from the deck of a boat, with various boat equipment in the foreground.
Large floating iceberg with multiple arches and a flat top, floating in the ocean under cloudy sky.
A large cruise ship or vessel on the ocean with a cloudy sky and sunset in the background.
An iceberg floating in the ocean with a snow-covered mountain in the background
A gloved hand holding a large, spiny, segmented marine invertebrate with a blurred workshop background.
Close-up of a pile of dried starfish with reddish-pink and beige colors.
The Commonwealth Lord Howe Island Marine Park is one of the study sites for our Our Marine Parks Grant.
Jack Shick deploying a Fish-SOOP logger to record a temperature profile down to 70m at Lord Howe Island