Census of Marine Life Portal Research Index Past Present Future Unify Past, Present, Future Research Photo Gallery Glossary Links Search this web site Technology Index Transportation to the Study Area Observing and Counting Collecting Organisms Measuring Physical Properties Studying Movement Identifying Cataloging and Analyzing Data Site Map About this site Front Page Census of Marine Life Portal

Front Page > Technology > Collecting Organisms > Hand Collection:
   

Hand Collection

In order to properly identify and catalog the biodiversity of a site, researchers often have to physically collect specimens by hand for more thorough study in a laboratory. Examples of species are collected by SCUBA divers using nets and collection bottles, and by using devices called suction samplers that act like vacuum cleaners to collect small organisms. More quantitative methods include more systematic approaches such as quadrat sampling along the intertidal zone.

Much like observation by passive quadrat sampling, active collection using quadrat sampling involves using a series of squares (quadrats) of a set size placed across a habitat of interest. Species found within quadrats are collected for later identification. As with passive quadrat sampling, abundances of organisms found at the study site can be calculated using the number found per quadrat and the size of the quadrat area. Example specimens are often kept in long-term research collections for historical record. This is a time-tested sampling technique that is, as with all hand collecting, best suited for coastal areas where access to a habitat is relatively easy.

Scientists and assistants quadrat sampling along a transect line on the coast of Hokkaido, Japan. (Natural Geography in Shore Areas - NaGISA)


A picture of a quadrat full of organisms. (Natural Geography in Shore Areas - NaGISA; see full-size image -- 142K)   The same quadrat after all the specimens have been thoroughly removed for later identification. (Natural Geography in Shore Areas - NaGISA; see full-size image -- 116K)


Scientists sort specimens taken in quadrat sampling along the coast of Kodiak Island, Alaska. (Natural Geography in Shore Areas - NaGISA. Gayle Neufeld)


Click on the links below to see what Census projects use this technology:


top of page



Website maintained by
Office Of Marine Programs
University of Rhode Island
-Disclaimer-

E-mail comments about the web site to
webmaster@omp.gso.uri.edu.