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Programs : Brochure

This page is the brochure for your selected program. You can view the provided information for this program on this page and click on the available buttons for additional options.
  • Locations: Auckland, New Zealand; Multiple, Multiple; Papeete, Tahiti, French Polynesia; Woods Hole MA, United States;
  • Program Terms: Semester, Spring, Trimester
  • Homepage: Click to visit
  • Program Sponsor: Sea Education Association 
Fact Sheet:
Fact Sheet:
Click here for a definition of this term Language of Instruction: English Click here for a definition of this term Class Status: 3-junior, 4-senior
Housing Options: Cabin on ship, Dormitory Click here for a definition of this term Areas of Study: Animal Science, Biology, Earth Science, Ecology, Environmental Studies, Geology, Independent Study, Marine Science, Molecular Biology, Policy and Society, Public Policy, Sciences
Program Type: Field Study, Study Abroad Click here for a definition of this term Program: Direct
Program Description:
Multilateral efforts like the United Nations High Seas Treaty are on the forefront of modern biodiversity protection.
Oceans may contain more than one million species, however, less than one-quarter of these have been identified. Marine biodiversity has the potential to transform medicine, industry, environmental remediation, and energy production, but is threatened by pollution, habitat destruction, over-fishing, and climate change. Studying organisms beyond national boundaries is crucial to understanding and conserving our ocean ecosystems.

Using the same portable next generation sequencing platform employed on the International Space Station and in both the Arctic and Antarctic wilderness, students enrolled in SEA’s Marine Biodiversity & Conservation Program learn how to use modern molecular tools to ask and answer ecological and conservation questions as they sail from New Zealand to Tahiti.

Traversing a range of bioregions, including temperate, blue water, and tropical, students will collect zooplankton specimens from the mesopelagic (the Ocean Twilight Zone), and conduct group research projects addressing population genomics and biodiversity. Students will examine how these ecosystems are responding to climate change, and gain an understanding of how such research informs conservation policy.

The MBC program along this cruise track is planned as a long-term and much needed data set that can help shape conservation in the Pacific.

The program ends in Tahiti with a two-week second shore component and student-led symposium with local stakeholders, scientists, and conservationists.

The Marine Biodiversity & Conservation program is geared toward students interested in in ocean science as a career, as well as those interested in marine ecology and conservation, molecular biology, or environmental marine policy.