InnerSpace Scientific Diving

InnerSpace Scientific Diving Provides scientific diving services primarily for government agencies and academia Resler founded InnerSpace Scientific Diving (ISSD).

Several years before leaving 4 1/2 decades in government literally and figuratively immersed in the physical and legal realities of coastal and related affairs, Steven C. Steve has more than five decades of scientific diving experience in biological, geomorphological, and archaeological marine and other aquatic field research. He and others associated with ISSD and specializing in all fields of sc

ientific diving tailor scientific diving services to meet the needs of municipal, state and federal agencies and public and private educational and other research institutions. ISSD provides "Science In Depth".

Today is National Scientific Diving Day. It’s also the 40th anniversary of recognition in federal regulations distinguis...
11/22/2024

Today is National Scientific Diving Day.

It’s also the 40th anniversary of recognition in federal regulations distinguishing occupational scientific diving from other commercial/occupational diving. Without that distinction, scientific diving would have been and today would be significantly curtailed - completely shut down in many instances.

I’m proud to have represented scientific divers - primarily in academia and government agencies - in making that distinction and providing support for it more than four decades ago. The American Academy of Underwater Sciences was born of those efforts.

Some of us are not trying to keep our heads above water.

More than 2 1/2 decades of a field research project involving mollusks comes to an end. Now it’s time for data crunching...
08/18/2024

More than 2 1/2 decades of a field research project involving mollusks comes to an end. Now it’s time for data crunching and analysis.

The latest from Sea Grant/University of Connecticut’s “Wracklines”. The 2021 efforts below the surface around Plum Islan...
05/05/2022

The latest from Sea Grant/University of Connecticut’s “Wracklines”. The 2021 efforts below the surface around Plum Island, NY is the lead article.

(Note: I said “bryozoans”, not rhizomes. Blame it on my mumbling and remotely communicating via Zoom and cell phones. Please.)

Post post note: the editors corrected this digital version.

https://seagrant.uconn.edu/2022/05/04/wrack-lines-issue-explores-creatures-from-sea-to-sky-to-garden/ #

"All Creatures Great and Mostly Small" is the theme of the Spring-Summer 2022 issue of Wrack Lines magazine, filled with stunning images and engaging articles about some of the marine and terrestrial animals around us and the people who devote their attention to them.

With many thanks to everyone who participated and made it possible, the latest from Plum Island, New York with the New Y...
04/07/2022

With many thanks to everyone who participated and made it possible, the latest from Plum Island, New York with the New York Natural Heritage Program and InnerSpace Scientific Diving, funded by Save the Sound and its generous donors:

(The press release from Save the Sound includes a link to our full report)

https://www.savethesound.org/2022/04/01/plum-island-scientific-dive-report-catalogs-126-species-of-flora-and-fauna-a-surprising-diversity-of-life/?emci=ec928815-deb5-ec11-997e-281878b83d8a&emdi=de8f383e-e6b5-ec11-997e-281878b83d8a&ceid=8071510

https://suffolktimes.timesreview.com/2022/04/report-study-of-plum-islands-pristine-waters-reveal-rare-long-island-habitat/

https://www.newsday.com/amp/long-island/suffolk/plum-island-underwater-ecosystem-report-xanrkdy2

(The Newsday piece has a typo - it’s more than 800 acres, not miles)

Southold, NY—The results of a 2021 scientific dive off the coast of Plum Island, NY, were released today, providing a deeper understanding of findings from an earlier dive and documenting 126 species of plants and animals beneath the surface of Long Island Sound. The report, “Survey of Plum Isla...

04/01/2022

In a report released today, scientists leading an August 2021 dive off Plum Island have recorded 126 species—double the count from a previous dive! They’ve also helped advance future mapping of the island’s natural communities, including habitats rare for Long Island, such as eelgrass meadows and subtidal areas with large boulders completely covered with organisms--including corals and anemones. Read the full report here: https://ecs.page.link/CyTYk. New York Natural Heritage Program InnerSpace Scientific Diving

11/16/2021
Pass it on to the next generations. We need the passion and commitments now, and for the future.
10/27/2021

Pass it on to the next generations. We need the passion and commitments now, and for the future.

Students in Emma Willard School’s science classes get plenty of exposure to scientific theory, lab basics, and experimentation, but what is it really like to be a professional scientist? This year’s marine biology class had the opportunity to discover just that when scientific diver and....

A mistake in there that could have been made by anyone conveying info to or reporting what they heard or thought. These ...
08/15/2021

A mistake in there that could have been made by anyone conveying info to or reporting what they heard or thought. These are the numbers:

9 transects through 7 sites;

78 meter square quadrats;

26 rather than seven dives.

In collaboration with New York Natural Heritage Program and Cornell Cooperative Extension, Save the Sound's private donors sponsored a first-of-its-kind dive: five days underwater to survey biodiversity where the Long Island Sound and Peconic Estuary empty around 822-acre Plum Island.

From the memories files:SUNYSUB post-launch and sea trial, Port Jefferson Harbor, Long Island, NY, USA, June 1981.Three ...
06/03/2021

From the memories files:

SUNYSUB post-launch and sea trial, Port Jefferson Harbor, Long Island, NY, USA, June 1981.

Three senior ocean engineering students from the State University of New York (SUNY) at Stony Brook;

Steven C. Resler, ocean engineering college and Marine Technology Society
- Stony Brook Chapter, advisor and lead scientific diver;

Henry Honigman, experimental machinest and refined welder extraordinaire, SUNY Stony Brook - Heavy Engineering;

Herbert Herman, Professor and Chair, SUNY Stony Brook - Engineering , Laboratory for Surface Technologies and Materials Science;

Bill Wilkes, Sperry Oceanographics.

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Albany, NY

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