Deep-Sea Mining Reduces Seabed Biodiversity by 37%, Study Finds
December 5, 2025
A landmark study in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone shows a 37% drop in seabed invertebrate abundance directly along a deep-sea mining machine’s path, signaling significant biodiversity disruption from mining activities.
Researchers analyzed 4,350 sediment macrofaunal specimens across four expeditions, identifying 788 species, with emphasis on polychaete worms, crustaceans, and molluscs such as snails and clams.
The large CCZ assessment documented 4,350 organisms and 788 species over a 50-mile survey area near the seafloor, spanning crustaceans, mollusks, polychaetes, and other invertebrates.
Regulatory and industry responses include a temporary mining ban backed by several countries; the ISA has not approved commercial mining in international waters, while some nations push for faster approvals or less invasive extraction methods.
The study underscores broader environmental risks and fuels policy debates as nations prepare regulatory frameworks for deep-sea mining in international waters.
Experts stress how little is known about life in the CCZ, highlighting the need for ongoing research and precaution in mining decisions.
The research highlights biodiversity loss risks as uncertain in mined regions and calls for comprehensive mapping and conservation planning to mitigate impacts.
Lead authors say the findings establish quantitative baselines for effects of modern mining machines and stress the need for taxonomic work and expanded surveys in ISA-regulated CCZ protected areas.
Experts warn that pollution and habitat disturbance from mining could have long-term negative effects on vulnerable communities and recovery prospects, even if some species survive.
Despite CCZ’s mineral wealth and largely unexplored status, conservation concerns persist, with calls for direct assessment of mining impacts on faunal abundance and broader environmental protections for CCZ areas.
Context: Deep-sea minerals in the CCZ are seen as critical for clean energy tech, with growing demand fueling controversy over environmental trade-offs and governance by the ISA.
Most species are newly described, with molecular DNA data crucial for identifying biodiversity and understanding ecology where little was known.
DNA data was essential to identify many species, underscoring the need for molecular approaches in deep-sea biodiversity studies.
The study is presented as an independent, impartial effort for The Metals Company, with company review prior to publication in Nature Ecology & Evolution.
As the largest examination to date of deep-sea mining impacts on seafloor life, the study emphasizes data to inform ISA-led policy discussions and potential establishment of protected areas in the CCZ.
The data could guide policy on environmental standards and large CCZ protected zones to assess and mitigate biodiversity loss.
Lead author Eva Stewart and co-lead Dr. Thomas Dahlgren stress remote deep-sea sampling and DNA-based taxonomy to understand biodiversity and natural temporal changes in the abyssal ecosystem.
A UN treaty on the high seas, taking effect in January 2026, aims to protect oceans amid pollution and overfishing while ongoing talks address mining rules.
The study calls for predicting biodiversity loss risks and researching protected CCZ areas to better understand inhabitants amid limited current knowledge.
The research followed ISA guidelines for baselines and environmental impact assessments to inform regulatory decisions as industry moves toward exploitation.
The study aims to serve as a baseline for future impact analyses and to inform policy as mining shifts from exploration to exploitation.
Over more than five years and 160+ days at sea, the project conducted baseline biodiversity work, controlled mining tests, and extensive lab analysis, making it the largest investigation into mining effects on seafloor life.
The UK’s Natural History Museum, the National Oceanography Centre, and the University of Gothenburg conducted fieldwork before and after a mining vehicle test to establish biodiversity baselines amid anticipated CCZ exploitation.
The team carried out 160 days of fieldwork to compare biodiversity two years before and two months after a mining pilot, aiming to set baselines for exploitation-era impacts.
The discovery suggests mining activities disrupt seabed ecosystems and could shape new environmental standards under the ISA amid debates on regulations.
About 4,000 organisms were recorded, with roughly 90% new to science, highlighting the CCZ’s unknown biodiversity.
The 32% drop in species diversity coincided with declines in abundance in directly affected areas, while sediment plumes did not reduce overall abundance but shifted species dominance, signaling ecosystem disruption.
Proximity to mining tracks reduced abundance and diversity, whereas adjacent sediment clouds increased dominance by certain species, indicating localized disturbance rather than immediate regional collapse.
No commercial licenses have been issued in international waters, but activity continues: the Cook Islands with China issued licenses in 2022, The Metals Company pursues international Pacific waters, and Norway has delayed initial exploration licenses by years.
The decline in macrofaunal animals (0.3 mm to 2 cm) aligns with a 32% species diversity decline in affected areas, underscoring substantial seafloor habitat impacts.
Summary based on 6 sources
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Sources

BBC News • Dec 5, 2025
Over a third of animals lost in test deep sea mining - scientists
Popular Science • Dec 5, 2025
Deep sea mining test uncovered multiple new species
Phys.org • Dec 5, 2025
New deep-sea species discovered during mining test
Chester and District Standard • Dec 5, 2025
Seafloor animals down by 37% in deep-sea mining zone, landmark study finds