NIST supports assessments of the marine environment with measurement science, reference materials and data, and we contribute to the development of standards for sample collection and analysis.
NIST's programs in marine science are supported by our deep expertise in chemistry. We develop measurement science and produce reference materials to aid detection of environmental contaminants and evaluation of biomarkers of the health of marine wildlife, providing technical advice to government agencies like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency. We work with multiple agencies and institutes to collect environmental and biological samples that are preserved as a research resource in the NIST Biorepository.
More recently, we have turned our chemistry prowess to the problem of plastic pollution (learn more below), and support for the development of a circular economy, in which plastics and other materials are engineered to stay in the economy as recycled or upcycled products, preventing them from becoming marine debris.
Our staff members work at the NIST campus in Gaithersburg, Maryland, the Hollings Marine Laboratory in Charleston, South Carolina and at Hawaiʻi Pacific University in Waimānalo, Hawaiʻi.
Chemical contaminants and trace elements - NIST has a long history of developing measurement methods to support the detection and monitoring of heavy metals and other elements in the environment, and in animal and human tissues, blood and urine. Our reference materials—products that we have tested rigorously and for which we share results and data—are used by labs all over the world for ensuring that their measurement equipment and methods are working properly. When test methods are considered reliable, results from various labs can be compared confidently and researchers can build on each others' work.
Wildlife health monitoring - NIST's analytical chemistry experts are known the world over for their scientific rigor and innovative problem solving. We share that expertise with other government agencies, providing measurement expertise that they may not have in-house.
Plastic pollution research - Members of industry, universities, and government agencies here and abroad look to NIST to develop standards and methods for measuring amounts and types of plastic pollution ranging from mega-sized fishing gear to nano-sized particles. Through chemical testing, sources of the pollution may be deduced—opening possible solutions to reverse this environmental problem.
In addition, NIST optical experts provide measurements and standards for calibration of instruments used for satellite monitoring of Earth's oceans.