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<scp>LéXPLORE</scp>: A floating laboratory on Lake Geneva offering unique lake research opportunities

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Water 2021 41 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alfred Wüest, Damien Bouffard, Damien Bouffard, Jean Guillard, Bastiaan W. Ibelings, Bastiaan W. Ibelings, Jean Guillard, Damien Bouffard, Damien Bouffard, Sébastien Lavanchy, Marie‐Elodie Perga Natacha Pasche, Jean Guillard, Marie‐Elodie Perga

Summary

Researchers developed the LéXPLORE floating laboratory platform on Lake Geneva to provide continuous, in-situ environmental monitoring data across temporal scales from milliseconds to seasons, enabling new research opportunities that overcome logistical constraints of traditional lake sampling.

Abstract Environmental sciences depend heavily on observational data. Successful studies of ecological processes in lakes require in‐situ data that cover the relevant temporal scales from milliseconds to entire seasons. Temporal and spatial coverage requirements represent a non‐trivial challenge in lake sciences, which have traditionally used sampling campaigns conducted from research vessels or anchored moorings. These come with various logistical tasks and impose constraints on data coverage. An open water platform can overcome many of these limitations by providing continuous access and a wide range of analytical capabilities in direct contact with the lake environment. A consortium of five partner institutions constructed a 10 × 10 m, open‐water, multipurpose platform on Lake Geneva (Switzerland/France) for a broad range of limnological research. The LéXPLORE platform, anchored since February 2019 at a position reaching 110 m depth off the lake's north‐shore, provides workspace for a large number of instruments and up to 16 staff working in parallel on individual or integrated multidisciplinary projects. The safe, dry and protected floating laboratory offers direct access to the lake environment for high‐sensitivity, high‐throughput analyses including those which might advance sensor technology. The platform provides flexible workspace for both high‐resolution measurements and investigations of larger‐scale external forcing. It thus supports multidisciplinary empirical research in limnology, atmospheric sciences, and remote sensing. This article describes the platform and how it will advance aquatic sciences. The large number of projects that have already requested access to the platform demonstrate the efficacy and necessity of the LéXPLORE concept. This article is categorized under: Water and Life &gt; Conservation, Management, and Awareness Water and Life &gt; Methods

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