Where the waters meet
The secret of underground rivers on the coast
A walk along the beach at low tide. Dried sand crunching beneath your feet. But some-
times you sink in and your shoes get wet – a matter of no consequence to the walker but
a conundrum to the scientist: Where does the wetness come from? Is there fresh ground-
water flowing beneath the surface into the sea?
ZMT Newsletter #01/2025
Observation in the open ocean
New monitoring project MOOBYF
Many of them are hardly visible in the open ocean: here a bamboo raft, there a buoy,
somewhere else a tiny artificial island. Hundreds of them drift around off the coast of
Indonesia or the Maldives, for example. Some are attached to anchor lines several
hundred metres long.
ZMT Newsletter #01/2024
Life in a Plastic Sea
An ecosystem facing dangerous ‘colourful’ challenges
Marine litter and plastic pollution are an ever increasing problem for our oceans. Images
of fish bellies stuffed with plastic tell us the drama is reaching a crisis – but not every fish eats
this poisonous, colourful stuff
ZMT Newsletter #01/2023
Heading for the Arabian Sea
Research expedition to an ecologically zone
Six weeks on the German research vessel Sonne – since summer 2023, a ZMT team helmed
by biochemist Tim Rixen has been preparing for the research cruise that will set off from
Mauritius on 7 January 2024 heading for the Arabian Sea. The expedition is led and coordi-
nated by the University of Hamburg.
ZMT Newsletter #02/2023
Passages of Knowledge
The “South Seas” is a popular way of referring to the South Pacific. It evokes a naïve, dreamy
image, for example of the Fiji Islands: palm trees, sandy beaches and a paradise for divers
thanks to the spectacular diversity of marine life to be seen on the reefs around the 350 plus
islands. This is particularly true for reef passages – the “gates” in the reef that do not dry out
even at low tide – where pelagic species like trevallies and sharks also hunt for food
ZMT Newsletter #01/2021


























