The latest news and articles from marine research on the largest habitat on earth and its far-reaching significance for humanity.
Successful projects demonstrate that damaged marine ecosystems can recover if the right conditions are met. This can greatly benefit both humans and nature.
Marine protected areas are an important instrument for strengthening biodiversity, ecological functions and services - provided that protective measures are implemented effectively.
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?
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.
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.
Anyone interested in marine and environmental issues will inevitably come across the buzzword “planetary boundaries”. But what does it actually mean?
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 European research team led by AZTI - Marine and Food Research in Spain, and involving the Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT) in Germany, has developed a framework that establishes three pillars for marine AI to be reliable, ethical, and scientifically robust. Although AI use is growing rapidly worldwide, global governance in the marine domain remains fragmented, with differing regulatory approaches across regions. The full work is detailed in the scientific article “Towards Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence for Marine Research, Fisheries and Environmental Management” and was published in Fish and Fisheries.
The King’s Trough Complex is a several-hundred-kilometre-long, canyon-like system of trenches on the North Atlantic seafloor. Its formation was long thought to be the result of simple stretching of the oceanic crust. An international research team led by the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel has now shown that the so-called “Grand Canyon of the Atlantic” was formed around 37 to 24 million years ago through the interplay of a temporarily existing plate boundary and an early branch of the Azores mantle plume. Their findings have been published in the AGU journal Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (G-Cubed).
Greenland’s coastal macroalgal forests may be a far more significant contributor to global carbon storage than previously thought. That is the outcome of a new study co-led by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research (IOW) and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon. By combining satellite imagery, ocean drifter trajectories, and high-resolution ocean turbulence models, the international research team demonstrated, how ocean currents and intense mixing events act to push seaweeds – and thus the carbon in their tissues – into the deep ocean. The study was recently published in the Journal Science of the Total Environment.
Under the lead of the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW) the influence of parasitic fungi on the physiology and survival of cyanobacteria in the Baltic Sea was investigated. Such infections are known from lakes. Due to the high nutrient load in the Baltic Sea, there are high levels of cyanobacteria, some of which are toxic (algal blooms). In addition, the decomposition of algal blooms leads to oxygen depletion. Cyanobacteria are important for the nitrogen cycle, as some fix nitrogen and thus further increase nutrient concentrations in the Baltic Sea. The findings were recently published in the journal Nature Communications.
Through sand extraction and the disposal of dredged harbor silt, around 200 million tons of sediment are relocated every year in the coastal waters of the North Sea. The Wadden Sea is particularly strongly affected. This is the result of a new study by the Helmholtz Centre Hereon, which for the first time evaluated comprehensive data on dredging activities along the North Sea coasts. At the same time, dredged material could potentially be used in the future to help raise the seabed in areas that do not naturally accumulate enough sediment to compensate for rising sea levels. The study was recently published in the scientific journal Nature Communications.
The renewal of deep waters in the North Atlantic has slowed over the past three decades. This is shown by a new study from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, now published in Nature Communications. The study demonstrates that the “age” of water masses in the North Atlantic has been increasing continuously since the 1990s, indicating a weakening of the Atlantic circulation system. The results suggest that this trend cannot be explained by natural variability alone, but instead represents a signal of anthropogenic climate change. A slowdown in ocean circulation has far-reaching consequences for climate regulation, the ocean’s oxygen supply, and its uptake of carbon.
The Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) and the University of Bremen had already secured extensive data sets from the USA in 2025. The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation, DFG) has now approved around 860,000 euros in funding to systematically identify, secure and store endangered data over the long term, based on the PANGAEA data platform.
13 January 2026/Kiel/Limassol. Today, Expedition M216 set sail for the Mediterranean Sea with the research vessel METEOR. An international research team led by GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research will assess the state of the Mediterranean over the coming weeks. The research is conducted as part of a time series that was last carried out in 2018. The data collected now are therefore central to assessing current and future changes in the Mediterranean Sea. Among other things, temperature, salinity, nutrients and trace gases are being investigated. In addition, the focus is on hydrography, i. e. the layering and circulation of water masses.
During training cruises and regattas, sailors collect valuable data for climate research at sea. A recent study showed that this data can help improve estimates of the marine carbon sink.
Where does hydrogen in the deep sea come from? An international team led by the University of Bremen addressed this question and discovered an unexpected process occurring beneath the sparsely studied hydrothermal fields at extremely slow-spreading mid-ocean ridges that could play an important role. Particularly at sites where liquids circulate through sediments. Samples from the Jøtul Hydrothermal Field off Norway were analyzed for the study. The findings have been published in the professional journal Communications Earth & Environment.
The ocean may have absorbed significantly more carbon dioxide (CO2) than previously calculated. A new study by the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel and the Plymouth Marine Laboratory shows that the exchange of gases between air and sea is not symmetric, and that the global ocean has taken up around 15 per cent more CO2 than suggested by conventional estimates. In windy regions, air bubbles entrained by breaking waves substantially enhance the uptake of CO2. The results are based on extensive direct measurements from the ocean and have now been published in the journal Nature Communications.
17 December 2025/Kiel/Heraklion. An international research team led by GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel set sail today to gain new insights into the volcanic system off the Greek island group of Santorini. The focus of the expedition is to test new monitoring systems that will contribute to improved early warning in the future. Immediately after the first expedition of the MULTI-MAREX research project in winter 2024, an intense earthquake swarm with several tens of thousands of earthquakes occurred around Santorini in early 2025. The researchers can now access data from immediately before and during the seismic crisis and compare it with the current measurements.
Bowhead whales likely reproduce beneath the sea ice northwest of Spitsbergen, while using the open water in the eastern Fram Strait as a migration corridor. This conclusion comes from researchers in the Ocean Acoustics Group at the Alfred Wegener Institute, who recorded the calls of bowhead whales using underwater recorders and analysed the records with artificial intelligence. Their study on bowhead whale habitat use in relation to sea-ice cover has now been published in the journal Scientific Reports.
How can the Baltic Sea be effectively protected and its ecological status improved? This question lies at the heart of the new German-Danish Interreg project, RECOVER, which is developing a digital twin of the south-western Baltic Sea. Using microalgae as sensitive bioindicators, the projects’ aim is a system that will provide near-real time assessments of the environmental health of the Baltic Sea under increasing anthropogenic pressures and of effective restoration measures. Funded by the Interreg programme, the project runs until 2028 and involves businesses, policymakers, farmers, fishermen, local authorities and the public throughout German-Danish border region.
Corals obtain energy in two ways: firstly, through photosynthesis by their symbiotic algae, and secondly by taking up small food particles such as plankton directly from the water. In scientific terms, this process is known as “heterotrophy.” In a study published in Communications Biology, an international research team including Bremen-based scientist Marleen Stuhr (ZMT) reports that the contribution of heterotrophic food intake to energy production in corals has so far often been significantly underestimated. The underlying reason is rooted in the measurement methods themselves.
An international team of researchers led by the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology has uncovered a hidden world of tiny partnerships thriving in wastewater treatment plants worldwide. The microscopic allies—specialized bacteria living inside single-celled hosts—play a surprising role in both cleaning water and potentially contributing to greenhouse gas emissions.
Kiel. At GEOMAR, the Prof. Dr Werner Petersen Foundation presented this year’s early-career awards. Three prizes for outstanding doctoral theses, two knowledge transfer awards and one exchange fellowship were granted, each endowed with €2,500. The foundation thus recognises both excellent scientific work and exceptional commitment to sharing knowledge with society.
Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology find that urea is a major energy source for ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) in the open ocean, while coastal AOA prefer ammonium. The study, published in Nature Communications, suggests that organic nitrogen plays a far greater role in ocean productivity than previously recognized.
For the first time, scientists have resolved extremely intense tropical cyclones and their effect on the ocean carbon cycle in a global Earth system model. Using two category-4 hurricanes in the North Atlantic as examples, the study reveals a cascade of physical-biogeochemical effects including uptake of carbon dioxide and regional-scale phytoplankton bloom.
As part of the EU project ECOTIP, an international team of researchers, including the Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon, has analyzed the sea off Greenland more comprehensively than ever before. The key question: How is the area developing in the face of climate change and environmental pollution? Most of the samples were examined in the Hereon laboratories. The results are alarming. For example, the sea still contains lead from additives in gasoline, even though these have been forbidden for around 30 years. The study, in which the Institute of Oceanology of the Polish Academy of Sciences (IOPAN) also participated, has now been published in the journal Biogeosciences.
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.
The federal government and the governments of the five northern German states support the current development and sponsor the DAM