The latest news and articles from marine research on the largest habitat on earth and its far-reaching significance for humanity.
Anyone interested in marine and environmental issues will inevitably come across the buzzword “planetary boundaries”. But what does it actually mean?
The Baltic Sea is running out of oxygen. This is primarily due to fertilisers entering the Baltic Sea via rivers. There, these additional nutrients trigger a fatal chain reaction.
Introduced and immigrant animals, plants and microorganisms have been changing life in the ocean for centuries. Such resettlement can increase or decrease local biodiversity. There are examples of both developments.
No matter where people look in the world’s oceans: Plastic is already there. Plastic waste in the marine environment is a global problem of immense scale that urgently needs to be solved. At UN level, there is movement towards a global plastics agreement.
Marine protected areas are an important instrument for strengthening biodiversity, ecological functions and services - provided that protective measures are implemented effectively.
A loss of genetic diversity weakens the resilience and adaptability of organisms. If they are properly planned and implemented, renaturation and other measures can help.
Every six years, experts assess the environmental state of Germany’s marine areas. The comprehensive 2024 report reveals that the German North Sea and Baltic Sea are in poor condition.
Mineral resources such as nickel, manganese, cobalt, copper, zinc and rare earth metals are stored on the deep sea floor. However, the potential consequences of deep-sea mining for marine life are barely understood.
The expansion of offshore wind turbines is being driven forward in many countries. What impact does the large-scale expansion of wind power in the North Sea and Baltic Sea have on the marine environment?
Munitions in the seas and oceans threaten the marine environment and risk their sustainable use and management. For several years, research has been conducted to evaluate the scale of the impacts and to develop solutions for their future remediation.
The ocean stores large quantities of carbon dioxide and heat and thus, slowing down man-made climate change.
Researchers from a wide range of disciplines work together to unravel the complexities of marine systems. They are focusing on the questions: How do the oceans fundamentally influence our climate? And how can we make use of the seas while protecting them
Research vessels are as diverse as marine science itself. Each has its own strengths and areas of operation. Scientifically, they are capable of everything: biology as much as geology, meteorology or geophysics. Yet there are not many such ships.
Touchscreen-based ocean map for schools, educational institutions and exhibitions - navigate simply and intuitively by touch and immerse yourself in the underwater world.
A new study published in Scientific Reports reports the discovery of a remarkably extensive hydrothermal vent field on the shelf of Milos Island, Greece. The vents were identified during the METEOR expedition M192, where the research team used a combination of different methods, including underwater technologies such as an autonomous and a remotely operated vehicles, to survey the seafloor. These approaches revealed previously undocumented venting between 100 and 230 meters depth. This makes Milos home to one of the largest known shallow-to-intermediate hydrothermal systems in the Mediterranean and substantially expands current knowledge of vent distribution in the region.
01 December 2025 / Kiel. A study by an international team involving the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel shows that the expansion of Antarctic Bottom Water during a major warming phase around 12,000 years ago displaced a carbon-rich mass of deep-water in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. This process released carbon dioxide that had been stored in the deep ocean, thereby contributing to the end of the last Ice Age. The study provides important insights into how the ocean may respond as Antarctica continues to warm today. The findings are published today in Nature Geoscience.
Researchers at the Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT) and the University of Bremen have studied the nutritional value of five edible seaweed species, including some lesser-known algae, and examined their potential for sustainable nutrition. The study, published in the journal Discover Food, shows that the analysed species are rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids and have strong antioxidant properties as well as high protein and mineral contents.
21 November 2025 / Kiel / Balboa. Today, the German research vessel SONNE departs from Balboa (Panama) on a five-week expedition along the Central American Volcanic Arc. Under the leadership of PD Dr Steffen Kutterolf from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, researchers will investigate how climate change and volcanic activity are interconnected, and how chemical changes in volcanic products in sediments affect the global carbon cycle and the biosphere. The cruise also serves as a pre-site survey for a planned drilling proposal within the framework of the International Ocean Drilling Program (IODP3).
New Hereon study shows: Too little sand deposition in the German Wadden Sea The Wadden Sea in the North Sea consists of shallow coastal bays, known as tidal basins. These basins have an important function: they protect the coasts from flooding, for example from storm surges and rising sea levels. A new study by the Helmholtz -Zentrum Hereon shows that most tidal basins in the German Bight no longer have sufficient sediment to compensate for sea level rise. The results were published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment. They are based on an analysis of data from 25 years.
So far, the ocean has helped to buffer global warming by absorbing more than 90 per cent of the excess heat trapped in the Earth system by the anthropogenic greenhouse effect. A new modelling study by the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel has now examined how the ocean might respond if atmospheric carbon dioxide was drastically reduced in the future. The results show that, after centuries of cooling, the Southern Ocean could trigger renewed warming by releasing the stored heat back into the atmosphere. Whether this would occur as a single major “heat burp”, in many smaller pulses, or continuously over centuries remains unclear. The study has now been published in AGU Advances.
17 November 2025 / Brussels/Kiel. Today, an international group of leading marine scientists, including Prof. Dr Andreas Oschlies from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, launched a new European Marine Board (EMB) Future Science Brief on marine Carbon Dioxide Removal. The authors emphasise that reducing greenhouse gas emissions must remain the absolute priority – CDR approaches can only complement these efforts, not replace them.
New study shows that 16 percent of the Arctic Ocean’s organic carbon comes from terrestrial sources, such as thawing permafrost and eroding coastlines – and presents a new approach to assess its capacity as a carbon sink
A fragile, oversized tube was hoisted out of the North Sea off Cuxhaven in the summer. The find turned out to be the U16 submarine from the imperial era. The German Maritime Museum (DSM) / Leibniz Institute for Maritime History in Bremerhaven was immediately interested and is now bringing a piece of the submarine to Bremerhaven – thanks to the museum's digitization department.
Melting ice in the Arctic is causing an increasing amount of freshwater to enter the North Atlantic, which is expected to result in a weakening of the Atlantic overturning circulation. However, many modeling studies make unrealistic assumptions about how this water enters the ocean. A new study shows that the timing, location, and source of freshwater input can have a considerable impact on its eventual fate and should therefore be taken into account in future model experiments.
Between today and 21 November 2025, representatives from the international community will meet in Belém, northern Brazil, for the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30) – at the place where the Amazon rainforest meets the ocean. Alongside international partner institutions, the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel will be present at the Ocean Pavilion once again. Prior to the conference, GEOMAR signed the Belém Ocean Declaration, which urges all nations to recognise the ocean's central role in climate policy and ensure its protection.
How can eelgrass beds in the Baltic Sea be efficiently restored with the help of artificial intelligence (AI) in the most climate-resilient way possible? This is the core question of the new SEAGUARD research project, which is coordinated by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW). The project combines marine research, data science and environmental management and is funded with about 1.8 million euros until November 2027 as part of the German federal environment ministry's AI flagship initiative. Now, for the first time, researchers from all participating partner institutions are coming together for two days at the IOW to develop strategies for the joint work ahead.
Microorganisms in the Black Sea can produce large amounts of the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O). However, this gas never reaches the atmosphere because it is swiftly consumed by other microorganisms, which convert it to harmless dinitrogen gas (N2). Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology have now investigated this process and identified the key players involved.
Researchers use lipid biomarkers to reveal survival strategies in extreme ecosystems
On October 16, Dr. Katrin Kleemann from the German Maritime Museum in Bremerhaven (DSM) was named a Young Academy Fellow by the Academy of Sciences in Hamburg. The environmental historian successfully applied for the prestigious funding program and will now be part of the interdisciplinary network for three years. During this time, she will receive conceptual, professional, and financial support from the Academy.
Hydrothermal plumes as invisible transport pathways for iron A new review led by the MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences at the University of Bremen – highlights how hydrothermal vents on the seafloor shape iron availability and influence the global oceanic element cycles. The review study, titled “Iron’s Irony,” has been published in Communications Earth & Environment.
AWI study presents new concept for sustainable management of krill stocks in the Southern Ocean, in close cooperation with fisheries.
An AWI study gives a potential explanation as to why the ocean around Antarctica is defying climate model projections and continuing to absorb CO2, despite the effects of climate change.
Climate researcher Prof. Dr. Markus Rex is one of three distinguished recipients of this year’s NOMIS Award, one of the most prestigious and generously funded international scientific awards, for groundbreaking interdisciplinary research. The scientist from the Alfred Wegener Institute received particular recognition as MOSAiC expedition lead: For a year, RV Polarstern drifted through the Arctic, frozen in ice. The goal was to gain a better understanding of the complex interaction between the ocean, the ice, the atmosphere and the ecosystem. Hundreds of international scientists made significant contributions to the global understanding of climate feedback mechanisms in the central Arctic.
Under the lead of the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW), a review article outlined the state of the Baltic Sea coast and its expected development as a result of climate change. The article shows that the Baltic Sea can serve as a model for the consequences of climate change and that interdisciplinary research is needed to investigate changes in its shallow coastal zones. A focus is on researching the interactions between the coastal area and the open ocean and the aim is to develop a basis for marine conservation measures. The feature article was recently published in the journal Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science.
An international research team led by Kiel University (CAU) has systematically investigated for the first time how the WAIS responded to temperature increases in the Southern Ocean during a natural warm period, Marine Isotope Stage 11 (MIS 11), about 400,000 years ago. The results, published in the journal Nature Communications, provide valuable insights into the conditions under which the WAIS became unstable in the geological past and what parallels this could have for current and future warming scenarios.
14.10.2025/Kiel. How do legacy munitions affect the Baltic Sea? Which technologies can help safely identify unexploded ordnance? And what effects do initial clearance operations have on the environment? GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel is addressing these questions through three coordinated research cruises. Today, the second expedition AL642 sets off with the research vessel ALKOR into the southern Baltic Sea. During the 14-day cruise, new underwater technologies will be tested, among other things. Special focus areas are the Bornholm Basin, where dumped chemical munitions are being mapped, and monitoring in the Bay of Lübeck following recent test recoveries in August.
Researchers identify factors influencing the expansion of the Patagonian ice sheet
Driftwood plays a key role in Arctic coastal ecosystems: it stores carbon, stabilises coastlines and provides a habitat for animals. At the same time, it can offer clues regarding climate change in the Arctic region. coastal erosion and shifting fluvial dynamics. Despite the crucial role it plays, there is still a lot that we do not know about the large-scale distribution patterns of driftwood. Now, for the first time, researchers from the AWI have systematically mapped driftwood deposits, using satellite imagery and AI-powered evaluation methods. The result is the largest database ever produced, with researchers able to identify over 19,000 stable driftwood deposits.
6 October 2025/Kiel. The Southern Ocean around Antarctica plays a decisive role in the global carbon cycle – and thus in the climate system. This is supported by a new study involving the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, published today in Nature Communications. An international team has demonstrated that between 800,000 and 430,000 years ago, a stronger layering of the Southern Ocean prevented carbon dioxide from rising from the deep ocean into the atmosphere. As a result, temperatures were significantly lower than in later warm periods.
The federal government and the governments of the five northern German states support the current development and sponsor the DAM