AHS NZR Hybrid Webinar - The Footprint of Anchoring on the Seafloor

  • 13 Mar 2024
  • 10:30 - 11:00 (NZDT)
  • Virtual (TEAMS ID and PASS will be emailed to registrants only) or in Person at NIWA, Wellington Conference Room, 301 Evans Bay Parade Hataitai Wellington, New Zealand

Registration is closed

Hybrid Webinar (Virtual/in person for those in Wellington on the date)


Format

  • 10:30 - presentation
  • 10:45 – questions
  • 11:00 – tea/coffee at NIWA cafeteria (Wellington attendants only)

Presentation Details

Presenter: Dr Sally Watson, Marine Geophysicist, NIWA

The Footprint of Anchoring on the Seafloor

With the coronavirus pandemic came what media deemed the “port congestion pandemic”. Since it began, thousands of ships have been reported waiting outside heavily congested ports relying on anchoring gear to hold fast. While the shipping industry is known to contribute to air, water and noise pollution, the physical impact of shipping practices, such as anchor use on the seafloor, has received much less attention. With a regional survey using high-resolution (1 m) bathymetry data of a comparatively low congestion port in New Zealand-Aotearoa, we demonstrate that high-tonnage ship anchors excavate the seabed by up to 80 cm and the associated impacts are preserved for at least 4 years. This is the first characterisation of the intensity and extent of damage to the seafloor and benthic environment caused by high-tonnage ship anchoring. We demonstrate that the observed seabed damage is attributed to high-tonnage passenger and cargo vessels. Anchor use in port regions has significantly changed the structure of the seafloor, with downstream impacts on benthic habitats and ecosystem functions. Extrapolating these findings to a global scale, we estimate that between 6,000 and 20,000 km2 of coastal seafloor is adversely affected. With the predicted increase in global marine traffic, a less destructive method of managing high-tonnage vessels awaiting port calls is necessary to mitigate the impact of maritime activities on chemically and biologically important shallow marine environments.