Deep Sea Minerals - Vol 2 - Manganese Nodules

Rising global demand for metals and developments in technology have recently renewed industry interest in exploring, and exploiting, deposits of deep sea minerals (‘DSM’).

DEEP SEA MINERALS

1B

Manganese Nodules A physical, biological, environmental, and technical review

MANGANESE NODULES 1

Edited by Elaine Baker and Yannick Beaudoin

A Centre Collaborating with UNEP

Steering Committee Akuila Tawake (Chair) Secretariat of the Pacific Community/SOPACDivision Charles Roche Mineral Policy Institute Elaine Baker GRID-Arendal at the University of Sydney Yannick Beaudoin GRID-Arendal Malcolm Clark National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research Ltd (NIWA) Daniel Dumas Commonwealth Secretariat Chuck Fisher Penn State University James R. Hein United States Geological Survey (USGS) Robert Heydon Offshore Council Harry Kore Government of Papua New Guinea Hannah Lily Secretariat of the Pacific Community/SOPAC Division Michael Lodge ISA Linwood Pendleton Duke University, NOAA Sven Petersen IFM-GEOMAR Julian Roberts Commonwealth Secretariat Samantha Smith Nautilus Minerals Inc. Anne Solgaard GRID-Arendal Jan Steffen IUCN Arthur Webb Secretariat of the Pacific Community/SOPAC Division Authors Malcolm R. Clark National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research Ltd (NIWA) Robert Heydon Offshore Council James R. Hein United States Geological Survey (USGS) Samantha Smith Nautilus Minerals Inc. Craig Smith University of Hawai‘i Sven Petersen IFM-GEOMAR Elaine Baker GRID Arendal at the University of Sydney Yannick Beaudoin GRID Arendal Editors Elaine Baker and Yannick Beaudoin

Reviewers John Feenan IHC Mining Hiroshi Kitazato Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) Gavin Mudd Monash University Christian Neumann GRID-Arendal Andrew Thaler Duke University Cornel de Ronde Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences Phil Symonds Geoscience Australia David Cronan Royal School of Mines, Imperial College, London

Cartography Kristina Thygesen GRID-Arendal Riccardo Pravettoni GRID-Arendal

Front Cover Alex Mathers

Technical Editors Claire Eamer Patrick Daley

Production GRID-Arendal

Acknowledgments Special thanks to Dr Michael Wiedicke-Hombach fromBGR, for assistance with sourcing photographs; and to Akuila Tawake and Hannah Lily from the Secretariat of the Pacific Community/SOPAC Division and Peter Harris from Geoscience Australia for final reviews of chapters. Citation Secretariat of the Pacific Community (2103) Deep Sea Minerals: Man- ganese Nodules, a physical, biological, environmental, and technical review . Vol. 1B, SPC

MANGANESE NODULES 2

DEEP SEA MINERALS

1B

Manganese Nodules A physical, biological, environmental, and technical review

CONTENTS 1.0 The Geology of Manganese Nodules 1.1 The formation and occurrence of manganese nodules 1.2 Metal concentrations and tonnages 2.0 Biology Associated with Manganese Nodules 2.1 Habitats and biodiversity in manganese nodule regions 2.2 Global geographic context 2.3 Composition of sea-floor communities 3.0 Environmental Management Considerations 3.1 Environmental management objectives 3.2 General Environmental Management Approaches and Principles 3.3 Environmental studies 3.4 Defining Characteristics of Nodule Biodiversity 3.5 Environmental impacts 3.6 The potential extent of impacts 3.7 Mitigation and management measures 4.0 Processes related to the technical development of marine mining 4.1 Exploration 4.2 Mining

7 8 13 19 20 22 23 27 29 30 33 34 35 38 39 43 45 48

MANGANESE NODULES 3

MANGANESE NODULES 4

Introduction The presence of polymetallic nodules, commonly referred to as manganese nodules, on the abyssal plains has been known for more than a century. The nodules – rocky lumps made up of iron and manganese hydroxides – contain a variety of metals of commercial interest. In the 1970s, a number of national governments and mineral exploration companies sponsored efforts to investigate the recovery of manganese nodules discovered on the seabed underlying international waters. At the time, however, there was no international regulatory regime governing the international seabed. Consequently, security of tenure and legal certainty of ownership could not be guaran- teed. This lack of certainty affected the commercial development of polymetallic nodules (Derka- mann et al . 1981). At the same time, major land deposits of nickel and copper, the metals then driving interest in nodules, were discovered. That pushed metal prices downward and made the potential economic return on manganese nodules uncertain. These factors combined to halt the full-scale development of the industry. Today, there is renewed interest in manganese nodules. Governments and investors see them as a potential source of nickel, copper, and a number of rare earth metals. Initially, the growing interest in nodules focussed on Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction – often simply called the Area – especially a region area of the equatorial North Pacific east of Kiribati and Hawaii, known as the Clarion-Clip- perton Zone (CCZ). In 2010, the International Seabed Authority (ISA), the organisation responsible for administering the resources in the Area, published a technical report (ISA 2010), which contains a geological model of nodule deposits in the CCZ. More recently, there has been increased interest in nodules located with the Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) of Pacific Island States. To support Pacific Islands in governing and developing these natural resources, the Applied Geo- science and Technology (SOPAC) Division of the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC) is providing a range of information products, technical and policy support, and capacity-building activities through a project called Deep Sea Minerals in the Pacific Islands Region: a Legal and Fiscal Framework for Sustainable Resource Management (Figure 1). This publication created as part of that project, brings together expert knowledge on the geology and biology of manganese nodules and information about best practices related to the environmental management and technical aspects of mineral exploration and extraction.

MANGANESE NODULES 5

Participating Paci c Island States

Marshall Islands

Federated States of Micronesia

Palau

Kiribati (Line Iss.)

Kiribati

Nauru

(Gilbert Iss.)

Kiribati

Papua New Guinea

(Phoenix Iss.)

Tuvalu

Solomon Islands

Cook Islands

Timor Leste

Samoa

Fiji

Vanuatu

Tonga Niue

Exclusive economic zone

Figure 1 The Pacific ACP States (i.e. Africa-Caribbean-Pacific Group of States) participating in the European Union funded SPC Deep Sea Minerals Project

References

Derkmann, K.J., Fellerer, R. and Richter, H. (1981). Ten years of German exploration activities in the field of marine raw materials. Ocean Man- agement 7(1), 1-8.

ISA (2010). A Geological Model of Polymetallic Nodule Deposits in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone. Technical Study: No. 6, Internation- al Seabed Authority, Kingston, Jamaica. http://www.isa.org.jm/files/ documents/EN/Pubs/GeoMod-web.pdf

MANGANESE NODULES 6

1.0

The Geology of Manganese Nodules James R. Hein 1 and Sven Petersen 2 1 U.S. Geological Survey, 400 Natural Bridges Dr., Santa Cruz, CA, 95060, USA 2 Helmholz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel (GEOMAR), 24148 Kiel, Germany

MANGANESE NODULES 7

1.1

The formation and occurrence of manganese nodules

Manganese nodules are mineral concretions made up of manga- nese and iron oxides. They can be as small as golf balls or as big as large potatoes. The nodules occur over extensive areas of the vast, sediment-covered, abyssal plains of the global ocean in water depths of 4 000 to 6 500 metres, where temperatures are just above freezing, pressures are high, and no sunlight reaches (Figure 2). The manganese and iron minerals in these concretions precipi- tate (form a solid) from the ambient, or surrounding, water in two ways (Figure 3): • hydrogenetically, in which the minerals precipitate from cold ambient seawater; and,

• diagenetically, in which minerals precipitate from sedi- ment pore waters – that is, seawater that has been modi- fied by chemical reactions within the sediment. The metal oxides that make up the precipitate attach to a nucleus – perhaps something as small and common as a bit of shell or a shark’s tooth – and very slowly build up around the nucleus in layers. Their mineralogy is simple: vernadite (a form of manganese oxide) precipitates from seawater; todorokite (another manganese oxide) precipitates from pore waters; and birnessite (a third manganese oxide) forms from the todorokite.

Depth region of potential nodule development

Seabed from 4000 to 6500 metres depth - the abyssal depth at which nodules are generally formed Seabed below 6500 metres depth

Exclusive economic zone

Seabed from 0 to 2000 metres depth Seabed from 2000 to 4000 metres depth

Land area

Figure 2. Sea-floor bathymetric map showing where manganese nodules might occur in the Pacific ACP States region. Manganese nodules occur at depths of 4 000 to 6 500 m, indicated by dark green in this map.

MANGANESE NODULES 8

Formation environment for manganese nodules

Hydrogenetic nodules

4000

Hydro- and diagenetic nodules

Water depth in metres

Porous sediment Consolidated sediment Basalt

Diagenetic nodules

6500

Accretion of colloidal manganese from seawater

Migration of Mn 2+ ions and other cations from seawater into pore water for diagenetic formation of nodules

Source: Modified from Koschinsky, Jocobs University, Bremen

Figure 3. Formation of manganese nodules. This process takes place in water depths of 4 000 to 6 500 metres.

Hydrogenetic nodules grow extremely slowly, at a rate of about 1 to 10 mm per million years, while diagenetic nodules grow at rates of several hundred mm per million years. Most nodules

form by both hydrogenetic and diagenetic precipitation and, therefore, grow at intermediate rates of several tens of mm per million years (Figure 4).

Cumulative nodule growth rate l ti n l gr t r t

Nodule growth rate from core to rim o ule gro th rate fro core to rim

Milimetre/million year il metre/million year

Milimetre/million year Milimetre/mill on year

Growth rate as measured Growth rate as measured

Growth rate as measured Growth rate as measured

20

20

20

20

Core

Core

15

15

15

15

Core

Core

10

10

10

10

Rim

Rim

5

5

5

5

Rim

Rim

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

2

4

4

6

6

8

8

10

10

12

12

0

0

2

2

4

4

6

6

8

8

10

10

12

12

Growth age in million years Growth age in million years

Mill on years

Million years

Figure 4. Growth age and growth rate of nodules. Growth age versus cumulative growth rate (left) and growth rate versus model age (right) in nodules from the Campbell Nodule Field, New Zealand. Extrapolated ages are based on measured 10Be/9Be ratios and the extrapolated 10Be/9Be ratio of the rim. (ii) Model Ages are based on measured 10Be/9Be ratios and an assumed initial 10Be/9Be ratio. (iii) Growth Ages (in m.y.) are based on the elapsed time from initiation of growth (i.e., core to rim). Graham et al. 2004.

MANGANESE NODULES 9

The role of bacteria and organic matter in the formation of nodules is not well understood. The presence of bacteria could indicate a biological role in the formation of the nod- ules, but the bacteria could also be bystanders caught up in the process of mineralization. The very slow growth rates of nodules suggest that reactions linked with bacteria are not the major mechanisms of manganese and iron accretion. However, bacteria are the major players in sediment diagen- esis, the process that releases manganese, nickel, copper, and lithium to the pore fluids, which then take part in form- ing the nodules (Hein and Koschinsky 2013). Bacterial activ- ity and precipitation of organic matter may also play some role in the mineralization process. The greatest concentrations of metal-rich nodules occur in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone,or CCZ (ISA 2010, Figure 5), which ex- tends from off the west coast of Mexico to as far west as Ha- waii. Nodules are also concentrated in the Peru Basin, in the Penrhyn Basin near the Cook Islands (Figure 5), and at abyssal depths in the Indian and Atlantic oceans. In the CCZ, the man-

Cross-section of large, 13.6-cm diameter seamount nodule from Lomilik seamount within the Marshall Islands EEZ. The complex growth histories of manganese nodules are revealed by the tree-ring-like texture of the nodule interior. Photo courtesy of Jim Hein, USGS.

Nodules in the South Paci c

Marshall Islands

Federated States of Micronesia

Palau

Kiribati

Kiribati

Nauru

(Line Iss.)

Kiribati (Gilbert Iss.)

Papua New Guinea

(Phoenix Iss.)

Tuvalu

Solomon Islands

Timor Leste

Samoa

Vanuatu

Tonga Niue Fiji Cook Islands

Exclusive Economic Zone Regions of nodules Clarion-Clipperton Zone

Sources: James R. Hein, US Geological Survey

Figure 5. Location of nodule zones in Oceania.

MANGANESE NODULES 10

Variability in nodule abundance within the Clarion-Clipperton Zone

Small nodules of high abundance

Large nodules of high abundance

Small nodules of low abundance

Bi-modal nodules of high abundance

Photo: MichealWiedicke-Hombach, BGR

Average abundance of nodules Kilograms per squaremetre

Clarion-Clipperton Zone

15 kg/m 2

Peru Basin

Indian Ocean

Cook Islands

5 kg/m 2

10 kg/m 2

5 kg/m 2

Source: James R. Hein, US Geological Survey

Figure 6. Current estimates of average nodule abundance in four major locations.

ganese nodules lie on abyssal sediments covering an area of at least 9 million square kilometres. Nodule densities can be as high as 75 kg per m2 of seabed within this area, but more com- monly average less than 15 kg per m2 (Figure 6). The high abundance of nodules in the CCZ is attributed to a number of factors. The combination of slow rates of sedimen- tation and abundant sediment infauna (animals living within the sediment itself), which cause bioturbation and the uplift- ing of the nodules, which helps to keep them on the surface

of the seabed. The flow of Antarctic Bottom Water through the CCZ erodes and removes fine sediments, leaving abundant ma- terials (such as fragments of broken nodules, mineral grains, and plankton shells) for the manganese and iron to nucleate around. This flow also keeps the bottom waters well-oxygen- ated, increasing microbial activity. The high surface-water productivity of the region provides the organic matter that the bacteria in the sediment use in diagenetic reactions. Finally, a semi-liquid bottom sediment layer provides abundant pore-wa- ter for diagenetic nodule formation.

MANGANESE NODULES 11

Physical characteristics of manganese nodules

Manganese nodules come in many shapes and sizes. They can be round, oblong, composite, or flat. Their shape can be influenced by the shape of the nucleus, the water content of the surrounding sediment, growth rates, and how often they are turned by infauna or moved by epifauna. As a general rule, smaller nodules tend to be more symmetrical. As nod- ules grow, they are less easily moved about by currents and animals, which leads to asymmetric growth resulting from faster diagenetic growth on the bottom and slower hydroge- netic growth on the top. The surface texture of nodules depends partly on the domi- nant mechanism of formation. Other factors that influence texture include the size of the nodules, the strength of bot- tom currents, sediment on the surface of the nodules, and how often the nodules are turned (Figure 7). Diagenetic nod- ules tend to be rougher. Hydrogenetic nodules, in their most pure form, have a botryoidal surface (shaped like a bunch of grapes) that can be smooth or rough, but usually falls some- where between those two extremes. If the surface is very smooth, it was likely worn down by bottom currents (Hein et al . 2000; Hayes et al . 1985).

A mixed manganese nodule - Differences in surface texture

Hydrogenetic growth

Diagenetic growth

Source: Original photo from Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaffen und Rohstoffe (BGR)

Figure 7. Hydrogenetic and diagenetic manganese nodule growth.

MANGANESE NODULES 12

1.2

Metal concentrations and tonnages

Manganese and iron are the principal metals in manganese nodules (Figure 8). The metals of greatest economic interest, however, are nickel, copper, cobalt, and manganese. In addi- tion, there are traces of other valuable metals – such as molyb- denum, rare-earth elements, and lithium – that have industrial importance in many high-tech and green-tech applications and can be recovered as by-products (Figure 9). The abundance of nodules and, therefore, the quantities of associated metals are moderately well known for the CCZ, the Central Indian Ocean Basin and the Cook Islands EEZ, but

poorly known for other areas of the global ocean. A conserva- tive calculation for the CCZ estimates there are about 21 100 million dry metric tonnes of nodules in the region. That would yield nearly 6 000 million tonnes of manganese, more than the entire land-based reserve base of manganese (Hein and Koschinsky 2013). Similarly, the amount of nickel and cobalt in those nodules would be two and three times greater than the entire land-based nickel and cobalt reserve bases, re- spectively. The amount of copper in the CCZ nodules is about 20 per cent the size of the global land-based reserve base (Hein and Koschinsky 2013).

Concentration of iron and manganese in deep sea nodules Percentage of total nodule weight

5.9

28.1

7.1

15.9

Clarion-Clipperton Zone nodules

17.6

24.4

Indian Ocean nodules

Cook Island nodules

Iron Manganese

Source: modified from Hein and Koschinski, 2012

Figure 8. Varying percentages of iron andmanganese in nodules fromdifferent environments. The iron/manganese ratio is controlled by the ratio of hydrogenetic/diagenetic input and whether or not the sediments involved in diagenesis are oxic, containing measurable amounts of oxygen. The Cook Islands nodules are almost solely hydrogenetic.

MANGANESE NODULES 13

Concentration of nickel and other metals of potential economic importance in deep sea nodules

Nickel

Copper

Cobalt

Rare Earth Elements

Molybdenum

Lithium

Yttrium

Grams per tonne

13 000

4 000

1 000

100

Clarion-Clipperton Zone nodules

Cook Island nodules

Indian Ocean nodules

1 tonne

Note: the area of the squares is proportional to the grams per tonne value for each mineral. For comparison purposes, the area of the entire page represents proportionally one tonne.

Source:modi ed fromHeinandKoschinski,2012

Figure 9. Concentrations of metals other than iron and manganese. Concentrations are shown in gm/t in nodules from three different nod- ule regions. For iron and manganese, see Figure 8.

MANGANESE NODULES 14

Cook Islands manganese nodule CASE STUDY

Characteristics of Cook Islands EEZ Nodule Resource Water depth: Area of EEZ: Area of nodules ≥5 kg/m2: Target metal: Potential by products: Tonnage of nodules (dry): Cobalt grade: Tonnage of in-place cobalt: Global cobalt reserves (2012):

~5000 m 1 830 000 km2 (see Fig. 1) 750 000 km2 Cobalt Nickel, copper, manganese, niobium, zirconium, rare-earth elements 5 130 000 000 tonnes 0.41%

21 033 000 tonnes 7 500 000 tonnes 13 000 000 tonnes 98 000 tonnes 8 200 tonnes; ~8.4% of global production $14-20/lb USD ($31-44/kg) (see Figure 12) ≥$25/lb Steady for several years Variable, <1160 km (from Manihiki) ~3 200 km (NZ) to ~5 700 km (Australia)

Global cobalt reserve base (2009): Global cobalt production (2011): Cobalt in 2x106 dry tonnes nodules: Current cobalt price: 35-years cobalt prices: Current Profitable cobalt price:

Projected cobalt price: Distance to Rarotonga: Distance to processing plant:

The parameters listed above, combined with average concentra- tions of 0.45 per cent for nickel, 0.23 per cent for copper, and 16 per cent for manganese, suggest in-place resources of 23 085 000 tonnes of nickel, 11 799 000 tonnes of copper, and 820 800 000 tonnes of manganese. These in-place tonnages are signifi- cantly greater than those that will be obtained after collection and processing of the nodules, since not all nodules in an area will be mined and some are lost in processing. Small areas (in the range of thousands of km2) with abundant (≥25 kg/m2), high- grade (~0.5 per cent cobalt) nodules will be the initial targets for mining operations, should such operations take place. The Cook Island nodules are characterised by their high cobalt content (Figure 10 and Figure 11). Cobalt is becoming increas- ingly important, especially in the energy sector, due to its role in the production of rechargeable batteries. Cobalt is also used in a diverse range of industrial, hi-tech, medical, and military applications. The global cobalt market has historically

Cobalt, the target mineral for Cook Islands Average composition of the nodules

Manganese 16%

Nickel 0.45%

Cobalt 0.41%

Copper 0.23%

Figure 10. Current estimated average concentration of various metals in nodules from the Cook Islands. Data compiled by Jim Hein, USGS.

MANGANESE NODULES 15

been very volatile (Figure 12). However, in recognition of the growing demand (Figure 13) and in an effort to provide greater price transparency, the London Minerals Exchange introduced cobalt futures trading at the beginning of 2010. Cobalt is tra- ditionally produced as a byproduct of the extraction of other

metals, such as copper or nickel (Figure 14). The economic potential of the Cook Island nodules may increase if they are found to contain significant concentrations of rare metals and rare-earth elements. Determining this will require further geo- chemical analyses.

Metal tonnages in nodules from the Cook Islands compared to global reserves

Copper

Cobalt

Manganese

Nickel

25 Million tonnes

6000 Million tonnes

1000 Million tonnes

150 Million tonnes

5000

20

800

120

4000

15

90

600

3000

60

10

400

2000

30

5

200

1000

0

0

0

0

Cook Islands manganese nodules

Global land-based reserves

Global land-based reserve base

Source: James R. Hein, US Geological Survey

Figure 11 Current estimates of Cook Islands manganese nodules compared to global reserves. In-place tonnage of cobalt, nickel, copper and manganese in Cook Island nodules and a comparison with global land-based reserves and global land-based reserve base.

Cobalt metal prices between 1976 and 2011

US dollar per pound 60

50

40

30

20

10

0

1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Source: SFP Metals, UK

Figure 12 Global cobalt prices 1976-2011. Source SFP metals UK, http://www.sfp-cobalt.co.uk.

MANGANESE NODULES 16

80,000 Recoverable cobalt in tonnes Increasing land-based cobalt production

70,000

60,000

50,000

40,000

30,000

20,000

10,000

0

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Year

Source: U.S. Geological Survey, MineralsYearbook series.

Figure 13 Increase in cobalt production. (Wilburn, 2012).

Sources of cobalt production

From primary cobalt operations

Byproduct from nickel industry

Byproduct from copper industry and other

Source:Wilburn, 2012

Figure 14 Current sources of cobalt. After Wilburn 2012.

MANGANESE NODULES 17

References

Hein, J.R., Mizell, K.,Spinardi, F. and Conrad,T.A. (2013). Marine ferromanganese deposits as a source of rare metals for high- and green-technology applica- tions: Comparison with land-based deposits. Ore Geology Reviews [in press] ISA (2010). A Geological Model of Polymetallic Nodule Deposits in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone. Technical Study No. 6, International Seabed Authority, Kingston, Jamaica. Wilburn, D.R., (2012), Cobalt mineral exploration and supply from 1995 through 2013: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2011–5084, 16 p

Graham I., Ditchburn R. and Zondervan A. (2004). Beryllium isotope dating of ferromanganese nodules and crusts. New Zealand Sci- ence Review 61(2). Hein, J.R. (2012). Prospects for rare earth elements from marine miner- als. Briefing Paper 02/12, International Seabed Authority, Kingston, Jamaica. Hein, J.R. and Koschinsky, A. (2013). Deep-ocean ferromanganese crusts and nodules. In The Treatise on Geochemistry, v. 12, (ed. S. Scott), Elsevier.

MANGANESE NODULES 18

2.0

Biology Associated with Manganese Nodules Craig Smith University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Honolulu, HI 96822 USA

MANGANESE NODULES 19

2.1

Habitats and biodiversity in manganese nodule regions

Manganese nodules occur widely on the vast, sediment-cov- ered, rolling plains of the abyssal ocean (an environment that occupies more than half of Earth’s surface) at depths of about 4 000 to 6 500 m. The nodules are especially widespread in the North and South Pacific basins at latitudes greater than 10° N and S (McMurtry 2001). Where nodules occur, they are typically the predominant hard substrate, covering up to 75 per cent of the sea-floor. Manganese nodules vary in size, abundance, and

surface texture, producing habitat heterogeneity, or diversity, at the sea-floor on landscape (km) scales for both hard-bottom and soft-sediment biotas, or life forms. This habitat heteroge- neity leads to variations in faunal (animal) abundance and com- munity structure. Different communities live in sediments with heavy and light nodule cover, and distinct groups of animals live on the nodules themselves (Mullineaux 1987; Veillette et al . 2007a and b; Miljutina et al . 2010).

Depth: 4 000 - 6 500 metres

Very low ux of particulate Organic Carbon

V e r y w e a k b o t t o m c u r r e n t s ( l e s s t h a n 5 c m / s )

Very low bottom water temperature O

Note: nodules not on scale

Sediments

Living on the surface and above

Living on the nodules

Living in the sediments

Macrofauna

Microfauna

Meiofauna

Megafauna

Figure 15 Habitats and biodiversity in nodule regions. [GRID Arendal).

MANGANESE NODULES 20

Large foraminifer growing on manganese nodule from abyssal depths in the CCZ. Photo courtesy of C. Smith.

In general, deep sea habitats are influenced by a number of key ecosystem parameters including hydrodynamic regime, bot- tom-water temperatures, and the flux or flow of sinking food material (particulate organic carbon) from the zone, far above, where enough light penetrates to enable photosynthesis (Smith and Demopoulos 2003; Smith et al . 2008a). The abyssal regions experience relative extremes in all of these influences, with typ- ically very slow bottom currents (and, therefore, high physical stability), low bottom-water temperatures (around 2°C), and very low annual fluxes of particulate organic carbon. Because animals in the abyssal regions rely on the organic material sinking from above, abyssal ecosystems are among the most food-limited on the planet (Smith et al . 2008a), and ecosystem structure and function vary regionally, largely in response to the flux of particu- late organic carbon (Smith et al . 2008a; Figure 15). Species diversity is often high in abyssal habitats, compared to more food-rich, shallow-water settings (Snelgrove and Smith 2002). For example, hundreds of species of polychaete worms and isopod crustaceans, such as shrimp, are typically found at single abyssal sampling sites (Glover et al . 2002; Brandt et al .

2005; Ebbe et al . 2010). High diversity is also common among relatively large animals, especially echinoderms such as sea stars and sea cucumbers, and among much smaller animals, including nematode worms and the tiny single-cell, shell-clad protozoan foraminiferans. For example, more than 500 species of nematodes and over 200 species of foraminiferans have been found in single study areas of about 20 x 20 km (Nozawa et al . 2006; Smith et al . 2008b; Miljutina et al . 2010). At region- al scales, diversity is less well quantified but is thought to be high, with many thousands of species inhabiting abyssal basins (Snelgrove and Smith 2002; Ebbe et al . 2010). Some of these abyssal species – especially fish, sea cucumbers, and some foraminiferans – are widely distributed. However, many species have been collected, sometimes in very high abundance, in single localities only (Mullineaux 1987; Glover et al . 2002; Brandt et al . 2005; Nozawa et al . 2006; Smith et al . 2008b; Ebbe et al . 2010). Thus, there is likely no characteristic scale of distribu- tion for abyssal species. Some species may be very widely distrib- uted at abyssal depths across ocean basins, while others appear to have very restricted ranges spanning only 100 to 1 000 km.

MANGANESE NODULES 21

Global geographic context 2.2

Nodule regions sustaining different levels of particulate organic carbon flux appear to have different levels of species diversi- ty and substantially different faunal communities, both in the soft sediments and on the nodules themselves. (Figure 16; Mul- lineaux 1987; Veillette et al . 2007a; UNESCO 2009; Ebbe et al . 2010). The CCZ, the area of most intense interest for manganese nodule mining in the Pacific, experiences substantial east-west and south-north gradients in overlying primary production and the flux of food to the abyssal sea-floor (UNESCO et al . 2009; Watling et al . submitted). Based on these gradients, as well as on patterns of faunal turnover, the CCZ is expected to harbour distinct faunas and levels of biodiversity in different subre- gions. The CCZ is also thought to straddle a major biogeograph- ic provincial boundary in the abyssal Pacific (UNESCO 2009; Watling et al . in press).

Normalized parameter value

1.5

Abyssal sea cucumber wresting – Psychropotes versus Adrian Glover. Photo courtesy of C. Smith.

Megafaunal abundance

r 2 = 0.94 y = 41.86x - 9.507

1.0

Macrofaunal biomass r 2 = 0.96 y = 112.0x + 47.92

Microbial biomass r 2 = 0.58 y = 9.024x + 11.11

0.5

Macrofaunal abundance

r 2 = 0.672 y = 250.552x + 1751.954

0

0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

Poc ux (g CM -2 yr -1 )

Figure 16 Links between abyssal benthic ecosystems and particulate organic matter. Regression relationships demon- strating the strong dependence of abyssal benthic ecosystem structure and function on the level of particulate organic matter (expressed as carbon) flux to the sea-floor. All relationships are statistically significant (p < 0.05). Bioturbation intensity is based on 210Pb Db SCOC = sediment community oxygen consumption Modified from Smith et al. (2008a).

Tiny holothurians that live on the spines of sea urchins at abys- sal depths in the CCZ. Photo courtesy of Adrian Glover.

MANGANESE NODULES 22

2.3

Composition of sea-floor communities

The biology associated with manganese nodules has been studied most intensively in the CCZ. However, the environmen- tal conditions and factors affecting faunal communities are like- ly to be generally applicable to other abyssal plain habitats and, hence, relevant for the southwestern Pacific. Sea-floor communities in the CCZ exist in what is called the mesotrophic abyss, a region of moderate particulate organ- ic carbon flux and food availability by abyssal standards. The sea-floor in this region is heavily modified by the activities of animals. Xenophyophores (giant foraminifera ranging from 3 to 10 cm in width) are abundant, with furrows formed by burrowing sea urchins and spoke-like feeding traces and faecal mounds from spoon worms appearing occasionally (Smith and De- mopoulos 2003). These sea-floor animal traces are remarkably persistent, due to the physical stability of the sediment. In the CCZ, animal tracks and trails ranging in size from millimetres to centimetres last longer than 12 months before they are erased by biological or physical processes (Gardner et al . 1984). Megafauna are the largest animals in CCZ benthic (sea-bottom) ecosystems. These are animals large enough to be recognized in bottom photographs and range from about 2 cm to more than 100 cm in length. Megafauna include omnivorous fishes (especially Deep sea communities are generally divided into four body-size classes for study and description: megafauna, macrofauna, meiofauna, and microfauna (Figure 17).

rattails), cephalopods (such as octopus and squid), scavenging amphipods and deep sea shrimp, large deposit feeders such as sea cucumbers and starfish, and suspension-feeding glass spong- es, anemones, and other cnidarians. More than 20 megafaunal species can occur in seemingly homogenous areas of 1-2 km2. Xe- nophyophores are typically the most abundant megafauna in this region (Smith et al . 1997; Smith and Demopoulos 2003).

Photographs of animal tracks and faecal mounds on the sea-floor in the CCZ, taken with a time-lapse camera (Gardner et al. 1984)

Size of life in the deep oceans

Megafauna

Macrofauna

Meiofauna

Microfauna

Animals identi able from bottom photographs and videos

Animals retained on a 0.3 to 0.5 millimetre sieve

Animals passing through a 0.3 millimetre sieve and retained on 0.032 to 0.063 millimetre sieves

Organisms passing through a 0.32 millimetre sieve

Figure 17 Faunal size classes routinely found on the abyssal plain.

MANGANESE NODULES 23

b

c

d

a

g

e

f

Megafauna of the CCZ nodule province including (a) small-eyed omnivorous fish, (b) a predacious cirrate octopod, (c) suspension feeding sponge and brisingid asteroids, (d) a deposit feeding starfish (Hyphalaster), (e) a 50-cm long, deposit-feeding sea cucumber (Psychropodes longicauda), (f) a suspension feeding anemone attached to a nodule, and (g) another large (50 cm) deposit-feeding sea cucumber (Psychropodes semperiana).

The macrofauna are the size class below the megafauna. These are animals large enough to be retained on a 300- to 500-micrometre sieve. The macrofauna of the CCZ are a variety of sediment-dwelling animals including, polychaete worms, crustaceans, and bivalve molluscs (Borowski and Thiel 1998; Smith and Demopoulos 2003). The polychaetes dominate, ac- counting for about 50 to 65 per cent of both abundance and biomass in nodule regions (Borowski and Thiel 1998; Smith and Demoupolos 2003). The level of macrofaunal abundance is relatively low in abyssal nodule regions, compared to most of the deep sea. The body size of the CCZ macrofauna is also relatively small, compared to those found on the continental margins. Most animals are only a few millimetres to 1 centime- tre in length, with a median wet weight of about 0.4 mg (Smith and Demopoulos 2003). Most macrofaunal species appear to feed on surface deposits (Paterson et al . 1998; Smith and Demopoulos 2003; Smith et al . 2008b). Subsurface deposit feeders (such as the paranoid poly- chaetes) may also be abundant. Other trophic types, including predators and omnivores, make up a small percentage of the to- tal macrofaunal community (Smith et al . 2008b). At least 95 per cent of macrofaunal abundance in abyssal sediments in nodule regions is concentrated in the top 5 cm of sediment.

The size class below the macrofauna is called the meiofauna. These are animals that pass through a 300-micrometre sieve, but are retained on sieve sizes ranging from 32 to 63 microme- tres, depending on the type of organisms studied. This very small size class is comprised primarily of the tiny, shell-clad foraminiferans, nematode worms, and shrimp-like harpacticoid copepods. The foraminiferans appear to be the dominant and most species-rich group in the CCZ (Nozawa et al . 2006). These poorly known protozoans appear to feed on sedimentary organ- ic matter and sediment bacteria and, because of their abun- dance, may play a role in carbon cycling over the Pacific abyss, including the CCZ. The nematode worms are also numerous in nodule-province sediments (Lambshead et al . 2002; Miljutina et al . 2010). Nematode abundance is linked with bacterial bio- mass, so many of these worms may graze on sediment bacteria (Brown et al . 2002). The microfauna, mainly bacteria, constitutes the smallest size class of organisms in abyssal sediments. The estimated mi- crobial biomass in CCZ sediments (Smith et al . 1997) appears to be 10-fold larger than that of the macrofauna and 100-fold greater than that of the nematode worms (Smith and Demopou- los 2003). Although much of the bacterial biomass in abyssal sediments may consist of inactive cells sinking out of the wa-

MANGANESE NODULES 24

ter column (Novitsky 1987), the high microbial biomass relative to other size classes suggests that microbes may account for a large proportion of the respiration of the sediment community, playing a major role in the functioning of the sea-floor ecosys- tem (Smith and Demopoulos 2003). In the CCZ, the manganese nodules themselves harbour a bio- ta distinct from the surrounding sediments. In one CCZ locality, roughly 10 per cent of exposed nodule surfaces were recorded as being covered by sessile, eukaryotic organisms. Of these, foraminiferan protozoans accounted for over 98 per cent of both the surface cover and number of individuals (Mullineaux 1987), although this may not necessarily be representative of the entire CCZ. Animals found attached to nodules include small sponges, molluscs, polychaetes, and encrusting bryozoans, with the vast majority of the nodule species not found in sur- rounding sediments (Mullineaux 1987; Veillette et al . 2007a). The nodule fauna varies with the surface texture of nodules, as well as with regional variability in the flux of particulate organic carbon to the sea-floor (Veillette et al . 2007a and b). In addition to manganese nodules, the giant, single-cell xeno- phyophores may provide habitat variety on the sea-floor in abys- sal nodule regions (Smith and Demopoulos 2003). Although the ecology of xenophyophores in the equatorial abyss has not been explicitly studied, in other areas (such as on seamounts) the shell-like tests of these organisms provide shelter and/or food resources for a specialized community of macrofaunal inverte- brates (Levin and Gooday 1992). Because of their abundance, xenophyophores very likely contribute fundamentally to macro- faunal and meiofaunal community structure in nodule regions.

abyss, distinct from populations at the ocean margins. In ad- dition, there is evidence that the community structure of many components of the fauna differs substantially over scales of 1 000 to 3 000 km across the CCZ, driven in part by gradients in the flux of particulate organic carbon (Smith and Demopoulos 2003; Veillette et al . 2007a; Smith et al . 2008a and b). Many aspects of species function are also controlled by, or at least correlated with, this flux, so community composition is expect- ed to change across the region. Rates of change will vary with dispersal abilities and life histories of the fauna, which are gen- erally very poorly known. For recommendations on environmen- tal management strategies to conserve biodiversity and ecosys- tems of the abyssal plains, see section 4. A macrourid rattail, Coryphaenoides serrulatus, photographed at 2000 m on soft sediment seafloor with many quill worm tubes, off the coast of New Zealand. Photo courtesy of M. Clark.

Studies of sea-floor communities in the CCZ and other abyssal Pacific regions suggest that there is a characteristic fauna of the

A penaeid shrimp and a sea urchin belonging to the genus Plesiodi- ademaonanodulefield. Photo courtesyof Ifremer/Nautil, Nodinaut.

A pterasterid sea star and a sea anemone on a nodule field. Photo courtesy of Ifremer/Nautil, Nodinaut.

MANGANESE NODULES 25

References

Mullineaux, L.S. (1987). Organisms living on manganese nodules and crusts: distribution and abundance at three North Pacific sites. Deep- Sea Res. 34, 165−184. Novitsky, J.A. (1987). Microbial growth rates and biomass production in a marine sediment: evidence for a very active but mostly nongrowing community. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 53, 2368−2372. Nozawa, F., H. Kitazato, M. Tsuchiya, and A.J. Gooday, A.J. (2006). ‘Live’ benthic foraminifera at an abyssal site in the equatorial Pacific nodule province: abundance, diversity and taxonomic composition. Deep-Sea Research I 53(8), 1406-1422. Paterson, G.L.J., Wilson, G.D.F., Cosson, N. and Lamont, P.A. (1998). Hes- sler and Jumars (1974) revisited: Abyssal polychaete assemblages from the Atlantic and Pacific. Deep-Sea Res. 45, 225−251. Smith, C.R., De Leo, F.C., Bernardino, A.F., Sweetman, A.K. and Martinez Arbizu, P. (2008a). Abyssal food limitation, ecosystem structure and climate change. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 23, 518-528. Smith, C.R., Galéron, J., Glover, A., Gooday, A., Kitazato, H., Lambshead, J., Menot, L., Paterson, G., Rogers, A. and Sibuet, M. (2008b). Biodi- versity, species ranges, and gene flow in the abyssal Pacific nodule province: Predicting and managing the impacts of deep seabed min- ing. ISA Technical Study no. 3, International Seabed Authority, Kings- ton, Jamaica. Smith, C.R., Berelson, W., DeMaster, D.J., Dobbs, F.C., Hammond, D., Hoover, D.J., Pope, R.H. and Stephens, M. (1997). Latitudinal varia- tions in benthic processes in the abyssal equatorial Pacific: control by biogenic particle flux. Deep-Sea Res. II 44, 2295−2317. Smith, C. R. and Demopoulos, A.W.J. (2003). Ecology of the deep Pacific Ocean floor. In: Ecosystems of the World Volume 28: Ecosystems of the Deep Ocean, (Ed. P. A. Tyler), Elsevier, Amsterdam, 179 – 218. Snelgrove, P.V.R. and Smith, C.R., (2002). A riot of species in an environ- mental calm: the paradox of the species-rich deep sea. Oceanogr. Mar. Biol. Annu. Rev. 40, 311–342. UNESCO (2009). Global Open Oceans and Deep Seabed (GOODS) – Biogeo- graphic classification. IOC Technical Series No. 84, UNESCO-IOC, Paris. Veillette, J., Sarrazin, J., Gooday, A.J., Galeron, J., Caprais ,J.-C., Vangre- isheim, A., Etoubleau, J., Christian, J.R. and Juniper, S.K. (2007a). Fer- romanganese nodule fauna in the Tropical North Pacific Ocean: spe- cies richness, faunal cover and spatial distribution. Deep-Sea Res. I 54(11), 1912–1935. Veillette, J., Juniper, S.K., Gooday, A.J. and Sarrazin, J. (2007b). Influence of surface texture and microhabitat heterogeneity in structuring nodule faunal communities. Deep-Sea Res. I 54(11), 1936–1943.

Borowski, C. and Thiel, H. (1998). Deep-sea macrofaunal impacts of a large-scale physical disturbance experiment in the Southeast Pacific. Deep-Sea Res. II 48, 55−81. Brandt, A., Ellingsen, K.E.E., Brix, S., Brökeland, W. and Malyutina, M. (2005). Southern Ocean deep - sea isopod species richness (Crusta- cea, Malacostraca): Influences of depth, latitude and longitude. Polar Biology 28, 284 – 289. Brown, C.J., Lambshead, P.J.D., Smith, C.R., Hawkins, L.E. and Farley, R., (2002). Phytodetritus and the abundance and biomass of abyssal nem- atodes in the central equatorial Pacific. Deep-Sea Res. 48, 555−565. Ebbe, B., Billett, D., Brandt, A., Ellingsen, K., Glover, A., Keller, S., Ma- lyutina, M., Martinez Arbizu, P., Molodtsov, T., Rex, R., Smith, C. and Tselepides, A. (2010). Diversity of abyssal marine life. In: Life in the World’s Oceans, (ed A.D. McIntyre), Blackwell, 139-160. Gardner, W.D., Sullivan, L.G. and Thorndike, E.M., (1984). Longterm pho- tographic, current, and nephelometer observations of manganese nod- ule environments in the Pacific. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 70, 95−109. Glover, A.G., Smith, C. R., Paterson, G.L.J., Wilson, G.D.F., Hawkins, L. and Sheader, M. (2002). Polychaete species diversity in the central Pacific abyss: local and regional patterns, and relationships with productivity. Marine Ecology Progress Series 240, 157-170. Khripounoff, A., Caprais, J.-C. and Crassous, P.H. (2006). Geochemical and biological recovery of the disturbed seafloor in polymetallic nod- ule fields of the Clipperton-Clarion Fracture Zone (CCFZ) at 5000-m depth. Limnol. Oceanogr. 51(5), 2033–2041. Lambshead, P.J.D., Brown, C.J., Ferrero, T.J., Mitchell, N.J., Smith, C.R. and Tietjen, J., (2002) Latitudinal diversity patterns of deepsea marine nematodes and organic fluxes – a test from the central equatorial Pa- cific. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 236, 129–135. Levin, L.A. and Gooday, A.J. (1992). Possible roles for xenophyophores in deep-sea carbon cycling. In: Deep-Sea Food Chains and the Global Car- bon Cycle, (eds., G.T. Rowe and V. Pariente), Kluwer, Dordrecht, 93–104. Lutz, M.J., Caldeira, K., Dunbar, R.B. and Behrenfeld, M.J. (2007). Season- al rhythms of net primary production and particulate organic carbon flux to depth describe the efficiency of biological pump in the global ocean. J. Geophys. Res. 112, C10011. doi:10.1029/2006JC003706 McMurtry, G. (2001). Authigenic deposits. In: Encyclopedia of Ocean Sci- ences, Volume One, (Eds. S.A. Thorpe and K.K. Turekian), Academic Press, London, 201-220. Miljutina, M.A., Miljutin, D.M., Mahatma, R. and Galeron, J. (2010). Deep- sea nematode assemblages of the Clarion-Clipperton Nodule Province (Tropical North-Eastern Pacific). Mar. Biodiv. 40, 1–15.

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3.0

Environmental Management Considerations

Malcolm Clark 1 and Samantha Smith 2 1 National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research, NIWA, Wellington 6021, New Zealand 2 Nautilus Minerals Inc. Level 7, 303 Coronation Drive, Milton, Queensland 4064, Australia

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Human activities invariably have some impact on any ecosystem, and activities in the deep sea are no exception. Sea-floor ecosystems are increasingly affected by human activities, such as bottom fishing, oil drilling, and waste disposal (Polunin et al . 2008; Smith et al . 2008). With the emerging industry of deep sea mineral extraction, there is a need for appropriate and responsi- ble management strategies with an aim to maintain overall biodiversity and ecosystem health and function. In this section, we describe the likely environmental effects of deep sea nodule extraction, with a particular emphasis on the specific characteristics of abyssal and manganese-nodule biological communities. Management options are discussed, and recommendations are made on options that could balance the impacts of extraction with conservation of the wider environment and faunal communities.

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3.1

Environmental management objectives

A key issue at the outset, before any exploration or extraction occurs, is the clear definition of environmental objectives that will guide the management of any furture operations. These will vary regionally and nationally, but are typically directed at two broad goals: • To maintain overall biodiversity and ecosystem health and function; and • To reduce, mitigate and, where possible, prevent adverse ef- fects of mining and pollution that can affect wider habitats and ecosystems. A further key consideration is integrating environmental man- agement strategies with other, related efforts and agreements aimed at the conservation and sustainable use of the marine environment. This includes national and regional initiatives, as well as such global frameworks as the Convention on Biological Diversity’s process to identify ecologically or biologically signif- icant areas and the UN General Assembly Resolutions to protect vulnerable marine ecosystems.

Sampling manganese nodules. Photo courtesy BGR.

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3.2

General Environmental Manage- ment Approaches and Principles

Responsible environmental management objectives involve bal- ancing resource use with the maintenance of deep-ocean ecosys- tem biodiversity. Thus, management should include consideration of any functional linkages between the ecosystem and the subsur- face biosphere, thewater column, the atmosphere, and the coasts. Consideration should also be given to the full range of goods and services that the ecosystem provides (Armstrong et al . 2010).

The 1992 United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity de- fines the EcosystemApproach as: “Ecosystemand natural hab- itatsmanagement…tomeet human requirements to use natural resources, whilst maintaining the biological richness and eco- logical processes necessary to sustain the composition, struc- ture and function of the habitats or ecosystems concerned.”

Environmental Impact Assessment and Environmental Permitting Process Considerations: An example from Papua New Guinea

One approach to determining whether a project requires an environmental impact assessment (EIA) is a phased system of licences. In Papua New Guinea (PNG), the Environment Act 2000 outlines three levels of activity based on impact severi- ty. Each has different permitting requirements. Level 1 includes activities such as exploration, which may be similar in some cases to scientific research. Exploration in- cludes drilling to a cumulative depth of up to 2 500 m. Level 2 includes activities such as drilling greater than a cumulative depth of 2 500 m. Mining is a Level 3 activity. A Level 1 activ- ity does not require an EIA or an environment permit. A Level 2 activity requires an environment permit, which involves an application process, but not an EIA. Any Level 3 activity re- quires an EIA, which culminates in an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) that must be approved in order to obtain an environment permit. The permit, in turn, must be in place before development proceeds. In PNG, the environmental permitting responsibilities lie with the Department of Envi- ronment and Conservation (DEC), while the mining licensing It is generally a legal requirement (e.g. UNCLOS Article 206) for a process of prior environmental impact assessment (‘EIA’) and a resulting report to be undertaken before any activities likely to cause significant harm to the environ- ment are permitted to proceed. An EIA should identify the likely environmental and social impacts of an activity, and how these would be monitored, prevented, mitigated and/ or compensated for, to enable the relevant Government to decide whether or not to permit the activity to proceed.

responsibilities are separate, falling to the Mineral Resourc- es Authority (MRA).

Key stages of work involved in obtaining an Environment Per- mit in PNG potentially serve as a useful guide for more general application within the Southwest Pacific. These are described, in sequence, below: 1. Environmental Inception Report (EIR): The completion of an EIR is the first step in developing an Environmental Impact Statement. The EIR outlines the Project description and the studies that will be conducted during the Environmental Impact Assessment process. 2. Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA): The International Association for Impact Assessment (IAIA) defines an EIA as “the process of identifying, predicting, evaluating and mitigating the biophysical, social, and other relevant effects of development proposals prior to major decisions being taken and commit- ments made.” The EIA process will involve conducting various studies (see below). 3. Environmental Impact Statement (EIS): The EIS is the report that compiles all the information gathered during the EIA process and forms the statutory basis for environmental assessment of the Project. The EIS usually sets out a development proposal in- tended to enable engineering, cost, environmental, and commer- cial implications to be assessed by the Project proponent, the public, and relevant government agencies. The EIS characterises the Project’s beneficial and adverse impacts and risks, based, where necessary, on external scientific studies, and sets out measures to mitigate and monitor those impacts and risks. The

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