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Creators/Authors contains: "Benfield, Mark"

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  1. Abstract Underwater imaging enables nondestructive plankton sampling at frequencies, durations, and resolutions unattainable by traditional methods. These systems necessitate automated processes to identify organisms efficiently. Early underwater image processing used a standard approach: binarizing images to segment targets, then integrating deep learning models for classification. While intuitive, this infrastructure has limitations in handling high concentrations of biotic and abiotic particles, rapid changes in dominant taxa, and highly variable target sizes. To address these challenges, we introduce a new framework that starts with a scene classifier to capture large within‐image variation, such as disparities in the layout of particles and dominant taxa. After scene classification, scene‐specific Mask regional convolutional neural network (Mask R‐CNN) models are trained to separate target objects into different groups. The procedure allows information to be extracted from different image types, while minimizing potential bias for commonly occurring features. Using in situ coastal plankton images, we compared the scene‐specific models to the Mask R‐CNN model encompassing all scene categories as a single full model. Results showed that the scene‐specific approach outperformed the full model by achieving a 20% accuracy improvement in complex noisy images. The full model yielded counts that were up to 78% lower than those enumerated by the scene‐specific model for some small‐sized plankton groups. We further tested the framework on images from a benthic video camera and an imaging sonar system with good results. The integration of scene classification, which groups similar images together, can improve the accuracy of detection and classification for complex marine biological images. 
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  3. The Deepwater Horizon spill is one of the largest environmental disasters with extensive impacts on the economic and ecological health of the Gulf of Mexico. Surface oil and coastal impacts received considerable attention, but the far larger oil spill in the deep ocean and its effects received considerably less examination. Based on 2017 ROV surveys within 500 m of the wellhead, we provide evidence of continued impacts on diversity, abundance and health of deep-sea megafauna. At locations proximal to the wellhead, megafaunal communities are more homogeneous than in unimpacted areas, lacking many taxonomic groups, and driven by high densities of arthropods. Degraded hydrocarbons at the site may be attracting arthropods. The scope of impacts may extend beyond the impacted sites with the potential for impacts to pelagic food webs and commercially important species. Overall, deep-sea ecosystem health, 7 years post spill, is recovering slowly and lingering effects may be extreme. 
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  4. null (Ed.)