Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin, November 2024

Elizabeth D. Hetherington*, Clarissa Anderson, Liliana Bastian, Naomi Boon, Nan-Chin Chu, Ceci Rodriguez Cruz, Hayley Drennon, Andrew Gates, Brandon Gertz, Kelly D. Goodwin, Svenja Halfter, Kerry Howell, Ella Howes, Vanessa Lopes, Tinah Martin, Terrence McConnell, Pei-Yuan Qian, Sarah Seabrook, Leslie Smith, Glen Snyder, Karen I. Stocks, Rosalynn Sylvan, Dawn Wright, Lisa A. Levin*

The current United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021–2030; hereafter, the Decade) offers a unique opportunity and framework to globally advance ocean science and policy. Achieving meaningful progress within the Decade requires collaboration and coordination across Decade Actions (Programs, Projects, and Centres). This coordination is particularly important for the deep ocean, which remains critically under-sampled compared to other ecosystems. Despite the limited sampling, the deep ocean accounts for over 95% of Earth’s habitable space, plays a crucial role in regulating the carbon cycle and global temperatures, and supports diverse ecosystems. To collectively advance deep-ocean science, we gathered representatives from 20 Decade Actions that focus at least partially on the deep ocean. We identified five broad themes that aim to advance deep-ocean science in alignment with the Decade’s overarching 10 Challenges: natural capital and the blue economy, biodiversity, deep-ocean observing, best practices in data sharing, and capacity building. Within each theme, we propose concrete objectives (termed Cohesive Asks) and milestones (Targets) for the deep-ocean community. Developing these Cohesive Asks and Targets reflects a commitment to better coordination across deep-ocean Decade Actions. We aim to build bridges across deep-ocean disciplines, which encompass natural science, ocean observing, policy, and capacity development.

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