惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
J
Java Code Geeks
V
Visual Studio Blog
The Cloudflare Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
博客园_首页
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
博客园 - Franky
博客园 - 【当耐特】
Jina AI
Jina AI
月光博客
月光博客
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
H
Heimdal Security Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
S
Secure Thoughts
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
O
OpenAI News
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Vercel News
Vercel News
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
S
Schneier on Security
罗磊的独立博客
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
C
Check Point Blog
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
AI
AI
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

Forbes - SportsMoney

Florida And LSU Punch Tickets To NCAA Gymnastics Final Four Can LeBron James Lead Lakers Without Luka Dončić & Austin Reaves? How Global Champions Arabians Tour Is Becoming A Big Name In The Sports And Entertainment World Philadelphia Phillies Prospect Felix Reyes Can Really Hit A Baseball Yankees’ 3-Year Pitcher Joins NL Contender After Strong Start Rockstar Plugs Into NASCAR With Reddick Hoping To Turn Up The Volume To 11 Henrik Stenson Makes Senior Tour Debut With Invitation-Only Golf Ball Red Sox Send 4-Word Jarren Duran Message As Investigation Suggests Fans Mocked Swing Detroit Tigers Sign Kevin McGonigle To 8-Year $150 Million Extension Dodgers And Nationals To Benefit From Week 5 Schedule Dodgers Organization’s Former Outfielder Dies At 35 Following Car Crash Aryna Sabalenka The Brand Is About Authentic Personality How The NBA Nearly Doubled Viewership During The 2025-26 Season Phillies’ Rob Thomson Sends 3-Word Alec Bohm Message As Concerns Mount Blue Jays’ John Schneider Sends Trey Yesavage Message After Shaky Start Warriors’ Steph Curry On Play-In Win: ‘That’s What You Live For’ ‘Elite Eight’ Showdown Begins Today With NCAA Titles On The Line WrestleMania 42 Night 1 And 2 Full Card: Date, Time And How To Watch Scouting St. Louis Cardinals’ Exciting Rookie, JJ Wetherholt MLB Best Home Run Bets For April 16, 2026—Arraez And Jensen Kayla Harrison Sends Three-Word Message To Ronda Rousey After Rant Ronda Rousey Vs. Gina Carano: Full Card, Date, Time and How to Watch Union Berlin’s Marie-Louise Eta—Ending The Leadership Pipeline Myth Rachel Robinson Keeps The Torch Burning For Jackie 79 Years Later AEW Dynamite Results As Darby Allin Squashes MJF For The World Title Phillies Game Umpire ‘Violently’ Attacked After Chasing Philadelphia Criminal, Per Police High Stakes Meet Higher Scores At The 2026 NCAA Gymnastics Championships Yankees Star Sends 3-Word Message On Phillies’ Zack Wheeler After Return PIF Close To Cutting Funding For LIV Golf League, Financial Times Reports Red Sox’s Rival Hall Of Famer Questions Alex Cora After Garrett Crochet Decision Blue Jays Make Jeff Hoffman Change After Struggles: ‘I’m Pitching No Matter What’ Yankees Announce Harsh Roster Move Just 9 Hours After Promotion Matt Olson Chases Records For Consecutive Games Played Phillies’ Former Draft Pick, Rookie Outfielder Cut From Braves Roster Eddie Hearn Accepts Dana White's $30 Million Challenge Wilson Blade V10 Racket Release Adds ‘Pop’ For Aggressive Control Yankees’ Hits Leader Responds To Role Change Before Angels Loss Most Dangerous Teams In The NBA Playoffs 3 Reasons Mascherano’s Inter Miami Resignation Feels Forced These 3 Guardians’ Prospects Bring Great Future Home Run Potential Phillies’ Bryce Harper Sends Social Media Message On Rob Thomson ‘Accountability’ The World Cup Will Break Revenue Records—But At What Cost? Pickleball Slam 4 Preview — History Of The Event And Behind The Scenes Prep With The Players How To Get Masters 2027 Tickets Lottery Dates And Odds Dan Orlovsky Compares Ty Simpson To Brock Purdy, Names Surprising NFC Contender As Fit For 2026 NFL Draft Prospect IndyCar’s Chip Ganassi Racing, OpenAI Hope For ‘Competitive Advantage’ Shingles Altered Achilles Rehab For Pacers Star Tyrese Haliburton, But He’s Back On The Court Inter Miami CF Kicks Off New Era For South Florida Soccer In Nu Stadium How To Watch The 2026 NCAA Gymnastics Championships IndyCar Tweaks Firestone Fast Six Format For Rest Of 2026 Street Races IndyCar’s AJ Foyt Racing Hires Toby Sowery As Reserve Driver IndyCar’s Chip Ganassi Racing Goes Green With Green Sports Alliance Rory McIlroy Claims Second Straight Masters Title At Augusta Rockets Claim Fifth Seed In West AEW Dynasty 2026 Results, Winners And Live Updates On April 12 Former Dodgers Infielder, 3-Time MLB All-Star And Champion, Dies After Cancer Battle Townsend And Wild Secure Double Golds At Pro Pickleball Association Australia Moreton Bay Los Angeles Dodgers Prospect James Tibbs III Is Tearing Up Triple-A The Top Contenders For The 2026 NCAA Gymnastics All-Around Title Jannik Sinner Ties Novak Djokovic’s Masters 1000 Mark—Will Return To World No. 1 Mets Skipper Sends 2-Word Francisco Lindor Message As Concerns Mount Blue Jays Veteran Offers 2-Word Response On Replacing George Springer After Injury Memorabilia From First Hall Of Famers Highlight Rare Book Fair Former Yankees Catcher, All-Star Prospect, Dies: ‘I Knew I Was Setting History’ Los Angeles Licenses Naming Rights For Uniqlo Field At Dodger Stadium UFC Legend Retires In The Octagon After KO Victory UFC 327 Results: 5 Biggest Takeaways From A Wild Night In Miami UFC 327 Results, Bonus Winners, Highlights And Reactions Dana White Announces Huge New Fight For UFC White House WNBA Draft 2026 Date, Time, Order And Top Prospects Tyson Fury Vs. Arslanbek Mahkmudov Results: Highlights and Reaction Conor Benn Vs. Regis Prograis Results: Highlights and Reaction UFC Tonight: What Time Does The UFC 327 Fight Card Start? Tight Ends To Trade Away In Dynasty Fantasy Football Fury vs. Makhmudov Full Card, Ring Walk Times and How to Watch WWE SmackDown Results, Winners And Grades On April 10, 2026 WWE SmackDown Results As Pat McAfee Announces 25% Off WrestleMania 42 Tickets Packers Trade Inconsistent Dontayvion Wicks To The Eagles Inside 30 Years Of Progress At The Wendy Hilliard Gymnastics Foundation Kenny Omega Talks Comeback And Facing MJF At AEW Dynasty FIFA World Cup 2026: Why Ticket Scandals Still Cloud the Tournament Two Months Out NHL Legend Chris Pronger Speaks On Front Office Interest, New Book David Blitzer Expands Sports Empire With Bet On Golf’s Next Generation Brewers Boss Sends 5-Word Red Sox Willson Contreras Message After Spikes-Up Slide Joel Embiid’s Latest Setback Is All Too Familiar For The 76ers Yankees’ Former ‘Cult Hero’ Joins Division Rival In New Role Blue Jays’ New 2-Time All-Star Singled Out For Political Support Before Debut 5 WNBA Draft Sleepers To Watch In 2026 Partners Trailer Teases upcoming Pickleball Documentary Series to Look Forward To 2026 NFL Draft First-Round Projections: Top 32 Prospects & Mock Draft Riley O’Brien Among Top Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Adds For Week 4 In A Noisy Sports World, The Masters Stays Quiet Blue Jays Pitcher Cuts Ties With Team Right After Brutal Debut Yankees’ Aaron Judge Sends Ryan McMahon Message As Slump Worsens Analyzing 5-Star Men’s Basketball Recruits In The NCAA Transfer Portal Like Jackie Robinson, Cleveland’s Larry Doby Deserves Day Of Honor Aaron Rai Looks To Break Masters Par 3 Curse After Win Grade 1 Jenny Wiley Stakes At Keeneland A Wagering Paradise Chicago Cubs’ Pedro Ramirez Is A Switch-Hitting Prospect — But Where? Keeneland Picks: How My Boy Prince Anchors the Late Pick 3 Ahead of Breeders' Cup
Racing Yachts Double As Floating Labs For Ocean Research
Veronika Meduna · 2026-05-05 · via Forbes - SportsMoney
A sailor on a racing yacht taking in a sunrise.

Sailing crew aboard the Holcim taking in a sunrise.

Georgia Schofield | polaRYSE / Holcim - PRB (Source: 14_02_230211_GES_HOLCIM_A747554)

The ocean is the largest but least understood biosphere on Earth. It connects all continents and the poles, channels nutrients across the globe, feeds millions of people and soaks up excess heat and carbon. But its biodiversity is at risk of disappearing before we even know it.

“There’s an urgency to understand biodiversity in the ocean and how climate change is affecting it,” says Xavier Pochon, the science lead at Citizens of the Sea, a New Zealand-based charity cofounded by the Cawthron Institute and New Zealand Geographic in 2024. “We have amazing models that predict future impacts of climate change, but they don’t contain near-real-time biological data collected at sea. There’s a need to gather more data in remote places.”

Environmental DNA technology has been a game changer in the quest to accelerate the exploration and description of marine ecosystems in some of the most inaccessible parts of the ocean.

Traditional oceanographic research relies on direct sightings or even physical capture of species, but each drop of water teems with genetic signatures of marine life, from invisible microbes and phytoplankton all the way to the largest marine mammals that pass through several ocean basins as part of their migrations. Fragments of DNA in seawater can be read like a species barcode, Pochon explains, tracking the presence of marine plants and animals.

Fragments of DNA in seawater track the presence of marine animals and plants.

Christian Sardet & les Macronauts / Chronique du plancton.

But this cutting-edge eDNA technology is only one part of an innovative approach to ocean science. The other is to deploy yachts as data collectors. Equipped with user-friendly eDNA kits, they can gather samples along their sailing route and begin to build a more comprehensive picture of how life in the ocean is changing.

Pochon received an enthusiastic response from sport sailors who scour the southwest Pacific during regular rallies to help map biodiversity. But more recently he’s also set up eDNA sampling kits on some of the world’s fastest racing yachts taking part in extreme endurance races.

With newly confirmed ongoing commitment from the Vendée Globe Foundation, an endowment fund for oceanographic research established in connection with the Vendée Globe, a famous single-handed, non-stop, non-assisted round-the-world sailing race, Pochon hopes to expand the project to more boats to help tell the story of a changing ocean.

Yachts taking part in endurance races reach some of the most remote areas of the ocean.

Sailing Energy / The Ocean Race (Source: 14_06_230613_TOR_JOF_11472)

Commitment to Ocean Conservation

The connection with extreme endurance sailing began in 2021 with Fabrice Amedeo, who was already using autonomous systems to collect data on salinity, temperature, carbon dioxide and dissolved oxygen en route his fast-paced solo and team races.

As a former journalist with a passion for the ocean, Amedeo recalls that he decided to combine the adventure of sailing with a commitment to conservation. He didn’t need much convincing to add a prototype of the eDNA collection kit to his sampling protocol.

A year later, he set off on the Route du Rhum race across 3542 nautical miles from Saint-Malo, France, to Point-à-Pitre in the Caribbean.

Racing yachts act as ships of opportunity, collecting data enroute.

Amory Ross / 11th Hour Racing / The Ocean Race (Source: 14_07_230627_AMR_11HRT_0179)

It wasn’t meant to be. Four days into the race, an explosion damaged his yacht and all electronics failed. After another explosion two days later, Amedeo could only watch his yacht from a life raft as it sank to the bottom of the ocean with all equipment on board.

But this didn’t deter him — neither from extreme solo racing nor from collecting scientific samples along the way. In 2024, he sailed around the world as part of the Vendée Globe — one of only a hundred skippers worldwide to complete the challenging solo race — while also collecting eDNA samples across all latitudes and from all ocean basins. In November, he will again carry the latest version of the eDNA kit during the Route du Rhum 2026, the race which cost him his boat and nearly his life.

Amedeo sees his racing yacht as a ship of opportunity.

“It is not a research vessel,” he says; “it is a racing boat that travels routes that research vessels do not, and it offers scientists the opportunity to collect unprecedented data on the state of our oceans.”

He notes scientific investment requires hard work, but it is also fascinating. “Today, I find it difficult to separate my job as a sailor from this commitment. And in difficult moments, because there are some, I tell myself that I can’t give up because scientists are counting on me. I’m on a mission and, ultimately, this project gives me a lot of energy.”

The Ocean Race teams are all required to participate in a science programme.

Amory Ross / 11th Hour Racing / The Ocean Race (Source: 14_03_230329_AMR_11HRT_0723)

Stefan Raimund, the principal ocean science advisor at The Ocean Race, has a similar vision. This grueling six-month, around-the-world race already requires all teams to participate in a science program, and competitors are collecting a suite of environmental data, including physico-chemical measurements and microplastics.

During the race in 2023, one team, the 11th Hour Racing Team from the U.S., was keen to use the eDNA kit during a leg of the race that covered a broad range of latitudes and sea surface temperatures, Raimund explains. The team not only returned with a wealth of data, it also won the race and enjoyed even more media attention because of the added focus on science.

This put to rest concerns that data collection would distract sailors from racing. Here was proof that racing boats could collect scientific samples without sacrificing speed, Pochon says.

Innovation continues on the technology and design of eDNA kits.

Supplied by Xavier Pochon

Raimund notes the initial interest was in tracking carbon dioxide in the Southern Ocean, because this part of the global ocean is so under-sampled.

“But since then, there’s been a shift in thinking in the ocean racing community," Raimund says. "Many sailors are now interested and ask questions about the state of the ocean and that’s why it’s nice to have eDNA on board, because it’s much more compelling to explain changes in biodiversity than explaining changes in carbon dioxide concentrations.”

Endurance sailors have traveled with eDNA kits during The Ocean Race in 2023 and again on The Ocean Race Europe in 2025. Raimund says the initiative has since expanded across the sailing community and will be part of the science program when The Ocean Race returns in 2027, then potentially on multiple yachts.

Innovation and Performance

During the 2024 Vendée Globe race alone, Amedeo collected samples during 114 days and produced millions of DNA sequence read-outs across a map that spans all latitudes and longitudes.

“From this, we identified approximately 4,000 taxa, from microbes to whales,” Pochon notes. “And a lot of it is genetically unknown. For many of these genetic signatures we detected, we have no species name, we have no genus. This is especially so around the Southern Ocean, which is a really understudied and difficult to reach area.”

The biological wealth the team found in the traces of DNA was astonishing. Among the many discoveries were flying fish, deep-sea lancetfish famed for their bioluminescence and an elusive moray eel that migrates thousands of miles to spawn along routes that remain a mystery.

The speed at which eDNA samples can be sequenced continues to accelerate, and thanks to genomics companies such as Illumina, the project has ongoing capacity to continue analyzing samples. With help from the Minderoo Foundation, Pochon is also working on interactive dashboards to turn the data into informative displays for the general public.

Felix, Roofus, and Lily from the SV Jadamama crew, sampling eDNA for Citizens of the Sea.

Liz Powell

The foundation has been instrumental in bringing different ocean initiatives together to make sure data collection is comparable and sharable. “Right now, it’s the time to bring all the different data sets together,” Pochon says. “If we can increase the fleet, this will be super powerful.”

Already, the data collected as part of the Citizens of the Sea initiative feed into the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, which provides the International Union for Conservation of Nature (the keepers of the red list of threatened species) with information about the distribution of rare and endangered marine life.

But Pochon stresses the potential goes far beyond a species list to describing ecological changes over time, tracking range shifts, incursions of invasive species and toxic algal blooms.

The Kailua crew collecting eDNA samples during a passage from New Zealand to Fiji as part of the Pacific Rally.

James Frankham

Meanwhile, the technical innovation never stops. The New Zealand based company Sequench continues to improve the sampling kit, both for yachting rallies, which usually tow a torpedo-like device behind the boat, and for racing yachts, which need an integrated device that is easy to handle, lightweight, robust and at the same time, very precise.

The latest eDNA instrument works well for the IMOCA class boats used in round-the-world races, Pochon says. “We can pump water continuously, even at high speeds, thanks to two water inlets built into the keel.”

But the team is also testing the suitability of eDNA sampling on other boat types, including the maxi-trimaran used by the Sails of Change sailing team. Committed to the protection and restoration of biodiversity, the team is exploring eDNA sampling as part of a broader program aimed at developing innovative solutions to reduce risks to marine mammals in offshore racing.

Collecting eDNA from a catamaran proved a challenge, but Pochon explains this only highlights the need for engineering ingenuity to continue adapting the system to different boat configurations in the future.

Pochon hopes the data collected by yachts can be used to show the world how climate change is affecting ocean biodiversity and encourage governments to make more effective plans to forestall its collapse. With thousands of boats plying the ocean all around the world, he hopes to equip more vessels with portable, simple tools as the technology continues to improve toward smaller, faster and hands-free devices.

Amedeo is already looking toward the next Vendée Globe in 2028. “I would like to sail again without using fossil fuels, which I already managed to do during the last round-the-world race. I would also like to contribute to science once again ... and sail on a more efficient boat to prove that investing in ecology and science is not incompatible with performance.”