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You are here:   Home / News at ZMT / Latest Newsletter
ZMT Newsletter #01/2025

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2025

 

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

ZMT Newsletter #01/2024

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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

ZMT Newsletter #01/2023

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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

ZMT Newsletter #02/2023

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 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

ZMT Newsletter #01/2021

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2021

 

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

ZMT Newsletter #01/2022

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2024

 

"We need to think environment and development as one."

Raimund Bleischwitz - the new scientific director of ZMT

For sustainability researcher Raimund Bleischwitz, climate change is the central challenge of
our time. „In ten years’ time, I would like to see the global sustainability goals achieved,” says
ZMT’s new scientific director. By that time, man-made global warming should be limited, the
1.5-degree target should be within reach if possible, and 30 per cent of marine ecosystems
should be protected in a sustainable way and in line with the needs of coastal communities.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2022

ZMT Newsletter #02/2022

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Mission Possible

Towards blue carbon solutions

Time is running out: the increase in carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere is already
making itself felt. Temperatures are rising, the climate is changing. Limiting CO2 emissions is
part of the answer to solving climate change – but could we also reduce the amount of CO2
in the atmosphere by extracting carbon dioxide and storing it in the oceans? And, if so, how?

ZMT Newsletter #02/2022

ZMT Newsletter #01/2020

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2021

 

FOOD FOR THE FUTURE

Towards sustainable nutrition worldwide

The figures for fish caught around the world are falling – as the statistics published by the
United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) over recent years have revealed.
But in the future, food from the ocean will be more important than ever if we are to meet
the protein requirements of a growing world population.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2020

ZMT Newsletter #02/2020

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2021

 

The Challenge of Big Change

ZMT Programme Area 2 - “Global Change Impacts and Social-ecological Responses”

It is impossible to record the effects of climate change on the oceans and tropical coasts on
a solely regional basis. With the changes in water temperature, for example, fish stocks move
across national borders or mussels settle where no mussels lived before.

ZMT Newsletter #02/2020

ZMT Newsletter #02/2019

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2021

 

Concentrating on Clear Concerns

Resources, nutrition, climate, cities, migration … these are the burning issues affecting
the world community. In 2015, the United Nations focused on these problems and
formulated its “sustainable development goals” (SDG).

ZMT Newsletter #02/2019

ZMT Newsletter #01/2019

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2021

 

The Crew of the Alliance 

ZMT’s involvement in the European Union’s All Atlantic Research Alliance

Water does not respect national borders. When the world’s most important ocean current –
thermohaline circulation, which links all the oceans with one another – alters due to climate
change or transports ever more plastic waste, the effects are felt by all the nations on Earth.
It is time for an alliance, for a global fleet of ocean researchers, for joint expeditions.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2019

ZMT Newsletter #01/2018

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2018

 

The Green World of Miniscule Creatures

Diving into the bacteria community

Hundreds of metres of lines swash around in the shallow tropical water. Attached to them are
clumps of algae that sway gently in the sea swell. Anyone, like Astrid Gärdes, who dives into
their tangled green leaves discovers a spectacularly colourful society of tiny creatures. “The
diversity of the bacteria that live on and around the algae is incredibly high, and they are be-
autiful,” enthuses the ZMT marine microbiologist. “These miniscule organisms are important
for all the biochemical cycles in the water.”

ZMT Newsletter #01/2018

ZMT Newsletter #02/2018

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 2018

 

Drowning Megacities

How humans adapt when the water rises

Three megacities by the sea: Singapore, Jakarta, Manila. What will happen to their 40-mil-
lion-odd inhabitants when sea levels rise? “Singapore has been preparing for this threat-
ening scenario for years with standardised infrastructure measures,” says Anna-Katharina
Hornidge, head of ZMT’s Social Science Department.

ZMT Newsletter #02/2018

ZMT Newsletter #02/2017

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2021

 

What`s up in the Dry-Wet?

Research assignment in six of the world’s mangrove forests

The mud is 20 minutes away. That’s the time it takes a vehicle to drive from ZMT’s field sta-
tion in Bragança in north eastern Brazil to where the mangroves begin – 15 million hectares
of forest with wet feet. For marine biologists, this area is too dry; for land ecologists, too
wet. But Martin Zimmer is fascinated. Steaming swamps, a plague of mosquitos at 35°C and
waist-deep in mud. Field work like this is certainly exhausting, but very satisfying, according
to ZMT’s mangrove ecologist. “You don’t just know, you actually feel, that you as a human
being are part of a whole.”

ZMT Newsletter #02/2017

ZMT Newsletter #01/2017

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2017

 

The Next Generation

Trained in Zanzibar by ZMT, young researchers head for an optimistic future

When the sun goes down over the sea off Stone Town and a cool evening breeze wafts
through the narrow lanes of Zanzibar City, groups of young people meet in the little snack
bars and share their experiences of the day: scientists from all over the world returning from
diving in the reefs and seagrass beds, from working with local fishermen and from field work
in the villages. None of them share the same background: different countries, different sub-
jects, but they all know about each other and work hand in hand for a new epoch.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2017

ZMT Newsletter #02/2016

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 2016

 

Universe in Microsocm

ZMT researchers collect tiny organisms – their miniscule cosmos
can reveal how the submarine world will respond to climate change.

Brilliant white sand – when ecstatic holidaymakers stroll along Thailand’s beaches
they do not realise that they are walking on the sensational legacies of a world-builder.
“The sand on tropical beaches around the world is largely composed of the calcified
skeletons of foraminifera – single-cell organisms only about six millimetres long,”
says Claire Reymond of ZMT. “You find these protozoa all over the world and
although there are regional differences, they play a significant role in building reefs
and coastal sediments.”

ZMT Newsletter #02/2016

ZMT Newsletter #01/2016

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2016

 

Measuring Monsters

Off Tahiti ZMT researchers are gathering the first data on the height
and power of the most famous waves in the world

They break precisely on the steep reef wall – the enormous waves off Tahiti. Every
year they attract thousands of onlookers when the world's best surfers line up to ride
the monsters. Now, ZMT researchers have been the first to discover exactly how high
these giants really are – more than seven metres. “That doesn’t sound like much when
you first hear it,” says Daniel Harris of ZMT. But when the ocean suddenly swells
up to that height, it is monstrous and destructive.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2016

ZMT Newsletter #02/2015

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 2015

 

Compass for Crossroads

In a fishing village in Senegal ZMT analyses harvesting behaviour

Excitement on the beach: after days at sea in the simplest of wooden boats, the
fishermen return. A colourful crowd awaits the haggard men and hopes they are
bringing a good catch. When they land, the fish are immediately thrown onto the sand
and sold. The sight at Mbour beach, 80 kilometres south of Dakar on the Atlantic
coast of Senegal, is gripping, says ZMT’s Agostino Merico. “The struggle of these
fishermen reminds me of Hemingway’s story of the old man and his battle with the sea.”
How much are the Senegalese fisherman prepared to invest in harvesting their most
important resource?

ZMT Newsletter #02/2015

ZMT Newsletter #01/2015

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 2015

 

Helmsman to new horizons

ZMT advises GIZ in India

India’s coastal ecosystems sustain the livelihoods of millions of people. But they are
also changed by human activity. Drastic pollution, overfishing and the effects of
climate change are responsible for the critical state of some of these marine ecosystems.
The German Development Corporation, GIZ, and India’s Ministry of Environment
and Forests, MoEF, want to counter these developments by introducing conservation
measures in the period up to 2017. ZMT is helping to point the way forward by
delivering the appropriate toolbox for the GIZ project, “Sustainable management of
coastal and marine protected areas”.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2015

ZMT Newsletter #02/2014

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 2015

 

In the Scallop Sea

ZMT project in Peru’s Sechura Bay

As the sun rises, boats quietly glide across the calm waters of Sechura Bay. Peruvian
fishermen are on their way to harvest their shellfish beds – and on board are scientists
from ZMT. They want to dive into the depths to their scallop cages and collect another
batch of data. “We measure the temperature and turbidity of the water, the scallops’
growth and the volume of biomass they produce. We also register their oxygen
consumption and observe changes in the species composition of the Bay,” explains
Marc Taylor of ZMT.

ZMT Newsletter #02/2014

ZMT Newsletter #01/2014

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2014

 

In the Scallop Sea

ZMT project in Peru’s Sechura Bay

As the sun rises, boats quietly glide across the calm waters of Sechura Bay. Peruvian
fishermen are on their way to harvest their shellfish beds – and on board are scientists
from ZMT. They want to dive into the depths to their scallop cages and collect another
batch of data. “We measure the temperature and turbidity of the water, the scallops’
growth and the volume of biomass they produce. We also register their oxygen
consumption and observe changes in the species composition of the Bay,” explains
Marc Taylor of ZMT.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2014

ZMT Newsletter #02/2013

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 2013

 

A new departure with Africa

Interdisciplinary research in Zanzibar

Zanzibar – the name evokes images of sun-baked beaches under tropical palms. The
stream of tourists visiting the East African island off the coast of Tanzania is increasing
continually. Giant hotels are being built, one next to the other. “Zanzibar is one of the
fastest growing tourist regions in the Indian Ocean,” says Hauke Reuter of ZMT. And
this is a development that is not exclusively positive. “Coastal resources are used
intensively by the people.” Changes in the marine ecosystems are the result. ZMT has
now started to address important interdisciplinary research issues in this region –
together with local partners.

ZMT Newsletter #02/2013

ZMT Newsletter #02/2012

Cover ZMT Newsletter 02 2012

 

Bubbling Sensation

ZMT pilot project off Costa Rica made astounding discovery

The “bubbling reef” in the Golfo Dulce was the last stop on the expedition. Here, in
the southernmost part of Costa Rica, local colleagues had discovered gas bubbles
rising from a coral community. Whatever was it? This was a question ZMT biochemist
Tim Rixen, modeller Agostino Merico and reef ecologist Christian Wild were
determined to answer.

ZMT Newsletter #02/2012

ZMT Newsletter #01/2012

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2012

 

Bubbling Sensation

ZMT pilot project off Costa Rica made astounding discovery

The “bubbling reef” in the Golfo Dulce was the last stop on the expedition. Here, in
the southernmost part of Costa Rica, local colleagues had discovered gas bubbles
rising from a coral community. Whatever was it? This was a question ZMT biochemist
Tim Rixen, modeller Agostino Merico and reef ecologist Christian Wild were
determined to answer.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2012

ZMT Newsletter #01/2013

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2013

 

Bremen at the Red Sea

ZMT renews its cooperation with the Jordanian Marine Science
Station in Aqaba

Once again ZMT and the University of Jordan have united to conduct joint research
at the Red Sea. The Marine Science Station on the Gulf of Aqaba had partnered with
ZMT once before (1995-2000) as part of the Red Sea Programme on Marine Science
funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). ZMT Director
Hildegard Westphal and the President of the University of Jordan Aqaba Branch,
Redha Al-Khawalideha signed a Memorandum of Understanding in October 2012 to
both renew and strengthen these ties

ZMT Newsletter #01/2013

ZMT Newsletter #01/2017 (German)

Cover ZMT Newsletter 01 2017

 

The Next Generation

Trained in Zanzibar by ZMT, young researchers head for an optimistic future

When the sun goes down over the sea off Stone Town and a cool evening breeze wafts
through the narrow lanes of Zanzibar City, groups of young people meet in the little snack
bars and share their experiences of the day: scientists from all over the world returning from
diving in the reefs and seagrass beds, from working with local fishermen and from field work
in the villages. None of them share the same background: different countries, different sub-
jects, but they all know about each other and work hand in hand for a new epoch.

ZMT Newsletter #01/2017 (German)


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