not a marine biologist but I'm trained till Rescue Diver, after Advanced (Deep 30, Natural & compass underwater Navigation, Wreck & Night & side-mount & peak performance buoyancy) and deep Specialty 40m & Enriched Air Nitrox. Emergency First Responder SCUBA; Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus
This came at such a great time for me! Submitting my pre-survey to the dive master at Scripps Institution of Oceanography today for the sci dive course there. REALLY hoping on getting into the course, and also it is SO helpful to know about the scholarships available. Thanks for this vid!
I am a UXO tech now, completely unrelated. This really speaks to my passion though. Is an undergrad necessary? I was on the fence about whether to go to DIT for commercial diving (underwater welding) or to go the science diver route. Any advice is VERY much appreciated!
Hello, great video on scientific diving. I have been doing scientific diving since 2015 in Malaysia. Here there is no need for one to have a scientific diving license but after listening to you i think there should be one. I heard about the AAUS and did some research on it. The scientific diving course is certainly fascinating for post and undergrad students. Thank you for sharing.
Amazing is it mandatory to had previous marine science to become a scientific diver or persons become without science back ground can be a scientific diver... Replay will be helpful 💖🇮🇳
Good vid and very interesting. But while a looked at it to see how it works in the US, I saw this comment. It looks like you didn't get a reply, so I'll give you one: No. Not in the UK anyway. To do 'marine science' you have to be an excellent diver - the diving is your 'ride to work'. Then you do the science. To get paid to dive at work you need CMAS 3* or equivalent qualification. Google it - it's a Europaean thing but PADI and Naui quallies are listed as equivalents - I think 'dive Master' is the minimum). Or in the UK you can go and get an HSE (Health and Safety Executive) Part 4 commercial scuba cert. A week's course, which you pay for . You can get this from scratch, but it's bloody hard work unless you are already a competent diver. Covers dry suits, full face masks, roped diving, comms, independent air sources and stuff. Like the man says, you can always do your own independent research. You can do this with recreational quallies under recreational rules, working with other like-minded recreational divers. In the UK, this happens quite a lot. My published papers (gray literature and peer reviewed) were done this way and with 'Seasearch'. Seasearch is run by the Marine Conservation Society. If you meet their qually standards, you can go on their organised dives or use their training (delivered at cost) to do your own work, submitting data on their forms, which will then go in a UK data base. This is 'citizen science' and the Seasearch training gets you to a level where it cannot be argued that your data is 'not reliable'. You can also volunteer with university diving groups in the UK. But you must be qualified and capable and able to prove it. This gets you on their boats, participating in their work with the cost of boat, etc. paid for. But you must be prepared to pay your way initially. The niche you are filling is 'capable and reliable diver' in a context of a lot of students participating (or wanting to) in Uni diving. Bless 'em they tend to disappear when they get capable, 'cos they graduate and have to find a job. Hard to get into, but you can. Helps that in the UK you will be diving in poor viz and cold-ish water that is often rough. And rainy. A drysuit is pretty well essential. Still have a lot of people wanting to do diving, but not as many as in (say) Florida. In the UK there is also a route in with the Nautical Archaeological Society if biology isn't your thing. So, you don't have to have marine science quallies to be a scientific diver. I don't and I get paid as a freelance biological surveyor. You don't have to have a degree (I do, but its not marine). A science background makes it easier but what you really need is a desire to do the work and be an excellent diver. And be bloody stubborn about wanting to do it. Click on the logo and watch the obvious vid to find out more about what it's like in the UK. NB: channel is not monetised. There are other vids on there on other UK marine ecological topics. None advertise anything. Hope this helps
I can definitely try! PADI and the AAUS science diving cert can sometimes go along with one another, as you need to at least be an open water diver before starting the AAUS course.
You literally have a video for every single thing i need to know about 😭😭 Thank youu!
I'm so glad you've found my channel useful!
not a marine biologist but I'm trained till Rescue Diver, after Advanced (Deep 30, Natural & compass underwater Navigation, Wreck & Night & side-mount & peak performance buoyancy) and deep Specialty 40m & Enriched Air Nitrox. Emergency First Responder
SCUBA; Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus
This came at such a great time for me! Submitting my pre-survey to the dive master at Scripps Institution of Oceanography today for the sci dive course there. REALLY hoping on getting into the course, and also it is SO helpful to know about the scholarships available. Thanks for this vid!
I am a UXO tech now, completely unrelated. This really speaks to my passion though. Is an undergrad necessary? I was on the fence about whether to go to DIT for commercial diving (underwater welding) or to go the science diver route. Any advice is VERY much appreciated!
Hello, great video on scientific diving. I have been doing scientific diving since 2015 in Malaysia. Here there is no need for one to have a scientific diving license but after listening to you i think there should be one. I heard about the AAUS and did some research on it. The scientific diving course is certainly fascinating for post and undergrad students. Thank you for sharing.
Amazing is it mandatory to had previous marine science to become a scientific diver or persons become without science back ground can be a scientific diver... Replay will be helpful 💖🇮🇳
Good vid and very interesting. But while a looked at it to see how it works in the US, I saw this comment. It looks like you didn't get a reply, so I'll give you one:
No. Not in the UK anyway.
To do 'marine science' you have to be an excellent diver - the diving is your 'ride to work'. Then you do the science. To get paid to dive at work you need CMAS 3* or equivalent qualification. Google it - it's a Europaean thing but PADI and Naui quallies are listed as equivalents - I think 'dive Master' is the minimum). Or in the UK you can go and get an HSE (Health and Safety Executive) Part 4 commercial scuba cert. A week's course, which you pay for . You can get this from scratch, but it's bloody hard work unless you are already a competent diver. Covers dry suits, full face masks, roped diving, comms, independent air sources and stuff.
Like the man says, you can always do your own independent research. You can do this with recreational quallies under recreational rules, working with other like-minded recreational divers. In the UK, this happens quite a lot. My published papers (gray literature and peer reviewed) were done this way and with 'Seasearch'. Seasearch is run by the Marine Conservation Society. If you meet their qually standards, you can go on their organised dives or use their training (delivered at cost) to do your own work, submitting data on their forms, which will then go in a UK data base. This is 'citizen science' and the Seasearch training gets you to a level where it cannot be argued that your data is 'not reliable'.
You can also volunteer with university diving groups in the UK. But you must be qualified and capable and able to prove it. This gets you on their boats, participating in their work with the cost of boat, etc. paid for. But you must be prepared to pay your way initially. The niche you are filling is 'capable and reliable diver' in a context of a lot of students participating (or wanting to) in Uni diving. Bless 'em they tend to disappear when they get capable, 'cos they graduate and have to find a job. Hard to get into, but you can. Helps that in the UK you will be diving in poor viz and cold-ish water that is often rough. And rainy. A drysuit is pretty well essential. Still have a lot of people wanting to do diving, but not as many as in (say) Florida.
In the UK there is also a route in with the Nautical Archaeological Society if biology isn't your thing.
So, you don't have to have marine science quallies to be a scientific diver. I don't and I get paid as a freelance biological surveyor. You don't have to have a degree (I do, but its not marine). A science background makes it easier but what you really need is a desire to do the work and be an excellent diver. And be bloody stubborn about wanting to do it.
Click on the logo and watch the obvious vid to find out more about what it's like in the UK. NB: channel is not monetised. There are other vids on there on other UK marine ecological topics. None advertise anything.
Hope this helps
why and how did you start your undergrad thesis?
Do you HAVE to be in ocean sciences to do this? I have an Electrical engineering degree and I'm very interested doing scientific diving
Interesting, I'd never heard of that before! Could you perhaps compare that and a PADI certification that allows you to dive anywhere?
Thanks.
I can definitely try! PADI and the AAUS science diving cert can sometimes go along with one another, as you need to at least be an open water diver before starting the AAUS course.
@@oceanscholar Oh, ok. Wow, so it's really that hard. You need an open water cert and then go for the AAUS.
Sir I am a masters degree student in biotechnology, Can I also do this?