Participation in EU project DTO-BioFlow

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Screenshot hereon.de

The DTO-BioFlow project, which started in September, is funded by the EU’s Horizon Europe program. It is coordinated by the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ) in Belgium. The project, with 30 partners from 14 countries, also including the Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon, aims to integrate previously unavailable or hard-to-access marine biodiversity data into the biodiversity component of the EU Digital Twin Ocean over the next four years to provide a sustainable data flow for research. Marine habitats present a variety of challenges for observing, mapping, and monitoring biodiversity.

The Hereon Institute of Carbon Cycles provides extensive data sets on plankton and particulate carbon. „DTO-BioFlow is a unique project to elucidate marine biodiversity and visualize it in the context of a digital twin and to observe consequences regarding growing anthropogenic impacts and climate change. Our digital camera systems provide an important contribution regarding possible changes in plankton biodiversity as well as changes in carbon storage capacities by the biological pump in a changing ocean. The digital twin is an outstanding tool for our scientific work as well as for communicating results to policy makers for the protection as well as the sustainable use of our world’s oceans,“ says Dr Klas Ove Möller, Head of Department Biological Carbon Pump at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon. (Source: Hereon News)

Read the complete Hereon News:

==> A digital twin of blue diversity

==> Website DTO-BioFlow

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