Subsea Commercial Services Ltd.

Subsea Commercial Services Ltd. Supporting and supplying Offshore Energy, Ocean Sciences and Aquaculture.

Looking forward to next month's Aquaculture UK exhibition in Glasgow! Subsea Commercial Services Ltd. (SCS Ltd.) will be...
14/05/2026

Looking forward to next month's Aquaculture UK exhibition in Glasgow! Subsea Commercial Services Ltd. (SCS Ltd.) will be showcasing the eDNA Sampler, the X3 ROV and a range of underwater cameras

One of our ocean science clients is looking forward to receiving their second custom underwater housing from SCS. Coming...
13/05/2026

One of our ocean science clients is looking forward to receiving their second custom underwater housing from SCS. Coming in at a healthy 600mm x 235mm, rated to 50m, with six various bulkheads, vent plug and internal shelf. Pressure tested and certified, it will support their marine environment observation applications. If you have any projects that require cost effective housings designed by experienced subsea engineers please get in contact.

What is eDNA monitoring, and why is it useful for marine biodiversity research?Understanding what is happening beneath t...
21/04/2026

What is eDNA monitoring, and why is it useful for marine biodiversity research?

Understanding what is happening beneath the surface of the ocean is operationally challenging. Marine environments are complex, dynamic, and often difficult to access, yet reliable biodiversity data is increasingly required to support environmental assessment, monitoring programmes, and long-term project planning.

Environmental DNA (eDNA) has become a valuable tool in marine biodiversity monitoring, providing a way to detect biological presence without relying on direct observation or physical capture. For those working in challenging marine environments, eDNA offers an additional source of biological data that can complement established monitoring approaches.

Rather than replacing existing survey methods, eDNA monitoring is most effective when integrated into a broader monitoring system.

What is eDNA monitoring?

Environmental DNA monitoring involves collecting water samples and analysing them for genetic material released by organisms into the surrounding environment. This material originates from naturally occurring biological traces such as skin cells, mucus, scales, or waste.

Following sample collection, laboratory analysis is used to identify genetic signatures associated with different species. The results indicate which organisms are, or have recently been, present in a given area, without requiring visual confirmation or physical interaction.

In marine environments, eDNA monitoring is particularly relevant where visibility is limited, access is constrained, or repeated surveys are required across depth or distance.

How eDNA monitoring works in marine environments

While the basic principles of eDNA monitoring are well established, implementation in marine settings requires careful consideration.

A typical marine eDNA monitoring workflow includes:

● Water sampling at defined locations and depths

● Sample handling and preservation to reduce contamination and degradation

● Laboratory analysis to identify genetic material

● Interpretation of results alongside environmental and operational data

Marine conditions introduce additional variables. Currents, water movement, temperature, and salinity all influence how eDNA disperses and how long it remains detectable. As a result, sampling strategy and deployment design are critical.

From an operational perspective, repeatability, consistency, and integration with other monitoring data are often more important than single-point results.

Why eDNA is useful in applied marine monitoring

When used appropriately, eDNA monitoring can support marine biodiversity programmes by complementing traditional survey methods.

It can help identify species that are difficult to detect visually, including low-abundance or cryptic organisms. It is also well-suited to deep, remote, or low-visibility environments in which conventional surveys are constrained by deployment time, weather windows, or access limitations.

Because eDNA sampling does not require physical interaction with organisms or habitats, it can be applied in sensitive environments where minimising disturbance is a consideration.

This makes eDNA a practical addition to monitoring programmes that already rely on imaging, sensors, or remote platforms.

Limitations and practical considerations

eDNA monitoring effectiveness must be viewed in the context of the deployment environment and project related factors. The presence of genetic material does not always indicate the presence of living organisms at the precise sampling location, as DNA can persist in the environment and be transported by water movement.

Results are influenced by sampling design, contamination control, environmental conditions, and analytical methods. These factors must be considered at the programme design stage to ensure data is interpreted appropriately.

In applied monitoring contexts, understanding these limitations is essential to use eDNA data responsibly and effectively.

Integrating eDNA into wider monitoring systems

In operational marine monitoring, eDNA delivers the most value when integrated with other technologies rather than deployed in isolation.

Optical imaging, environmental sensors, acoustic systems, and physical surveys each provide different data types. eDNA adds a biological dimension that can strengthen overall understanding when aligned with these datasets.

This system-level approach supports more robust monitoring programmes, enabling data to be cross-referenced, validated, and contextualised over time.

Relevance across marine and energy sectors

Although eDNA monitoring is widely associated with ocean science and research programmes, the same principles apply across other marine and energy sectors.

In offshore energy, biodiversity monitoring supports environmental assessment and ongoing operational responsibility. In aquaculture, genetic monitoring can contribute to ecosystem awareness when used alongside imaging and environmental monitoring systems.

Across all sectors, the shared requirement is reliable data collection in harsh and remote marine environments, using monitoring solutions that can be deployed, repeated, and integrated with confidence.

Designing effective eDNA monitoring programmes

Effective eDNA monitoring begins with clearly defined objectives and a realistic understanding of operational conditions. Decisions around sampling frequency, deployment method, and system integration all influence the usefulness of the data collected.

When applied thoughtfully, eDNA monitoring provides a practical way to strengthen marine biodiversity programmes and support informed decision-making in complex marine environments.

eDNA sampling systems for marine deployment

For teams looking to implement repeatable, automated water sampling in operational environments, further information on our eDNA Automated Sampler is available www.subcomservices.com/edna-sampler-environmental-dna-sampling/

If an ROV loses power at depth, what helps you recover it?Allseas required global fleet-wide satellite location and trac...
17/04/2026

If an ROV loses power at depth, what helps you recover it?
Allseas required global fleet-wide satellite location and tracking for their new electric ROV fleet, but with one additional capability:
Asset visibility for recovery needed to be maintained in the event of ROV power loss subsea.
The solution - a battery-powered Nemo X Iridium satellite tracking beacon, customised so its high-visibility integrated LED flasher activates automatically underwater in the event of ROV power loss.
The beacon maintains satellite location and tracking for surface coordination. The flasher provides a visual reference at depth and on the surface during the recovery phase.
By separating the recovery signal from the vehicle’s power system, the visual cue remains available in the failure mode where it would otherwise be lost, without the need for additional systems or procedural steps.
If you deploy high value surface and underwater mobile platforms in challenging environments, where tracking, location, and recovery visibility are operational priorities, we configure proven solutions around your requirements.

We’ve joined the Aberdeen & Grampian Chamber of Commerce.As a business based in the centre of Aberdeen, staying connecte...
17/03/2026

We’ve joined the Aberdeen & Grampian Chamber of Commerce.

As a business based in the centre of Aberdeen, staying connected to the North-East business community matters to us, especially as much of our work is focused here.

We look forward to participating in Chamber events and contributing to discussions that support the continued development of the North East’s marine, offshore, and environmental sectors.

Read the full story here: www.subcomservices.com/subsea-commercial-services-joins-aberdeen-grampian-chamber-of-commerce/

Subsea Commercial Services to exhibit applied underwater systems at Ocean Sciences Meeting 2026As ocean science programm...
12/02/2026

Subsea Commercial Services to exhibit applied underwater systems at Ocean Sciences Meeting 2026

As ocean science programmes increasingly move toward long-term, remote, and lower-impact monitoring, the reliability and practicality of deployed systems matter more than ever.
At the Ocean Sciences Meeting 2026 (22–27 February, Glasgow), Subsea Commercial Services (SCS) will be exhibiting applied underwater systems designed to support exactly those kinds of deployments. Visitors can find the SCS team on Stand 54 at the Scottish Event Campus.

A key focus at this year’s event will be the eDNA Automated Sampler, an autonomous system developed to support repeatable, non-invasive environmental DNA collection in marine and freshwater environments. By enabling automated multi-sampling without requiring continuous vessel or human intervention, the system supports long-term monitoring programmes, remote deployments, and reduced operational overhead, particularly in locations with limited or costly access.

Alongside the eDNA system, SCS will be presenting a range of field-proven subsea technologies currently in use across ocean science, offshore energy, aquaculture, environmental monitoring, and nuclear inspection. These include:

X3 ROV
A compact platform for inspection, survey, and intervention tasks in confined ingress and demanding onshore, nearshore or offshore environments

Acoustic and integrated modems
Supporting reliable subsea communication, positioning and sensor integration

Underwater lighting and camera systems
High-output LED lighting, pan and tilt units, and IP cameras for inspection, monitoring and observation

Marine asset tracking and data relay solutions
Surface and subsea solutions for monitoring, tracking, and real-time data transmission globally

All systems are designed with deployment practicality, reliability, and long-term operation in mind, reflecting SCS’s focus on equipment that performs consistently in harsh subsea conditions.

“As monitoring programmes move toward longer-term and lower-intervention deployments, the practical constraints start to matter more,” said Callum Magee, Managing Director of Subsea Commercial Services. “Systems like our eDNA Automated Sampler are designed to support repeatable sampling in locations where regular access isn’t practical, while reducing the operational overhead that often limits long-term data collection. The Ocean Sciences Meeting gives us the opportunity to speak directly with teams dealing with those challenges.”

The Ocean Sciences Meeting is one of the key global forums for applied ocean research, monitoring, and observation. Attendees interested in how monitoring systems are being deployed in real-world conditions are invited to visit Stand 54 to speak with the SCS team about current projects, deployment challenges, and operational requirements.

Subsea Commercial Services Ltd. (SCS Ltd.) is proud to offer our clients rental access to a state-of-the-art pressure te...
09/10/2025

Subsea Commercial Services Ltd. (SCS Ltd.) is proud to offer our clients rental access to a state-of-the-art pressure test facility for verification of the integrity and performance of their subsea equipment. Equipped with a robust pressure chamber rated to 600 bar, equivalent to a water depth of 6000 meters, it is ideal for testing a wide range of underwater components and assemblies. With an internal volume of 400mm in diameter and 1000mm in depth, the chamber can accommodate a variety of equipment sizes.

For more information please visit www.subcomservices.com/services and contact us directly for pricing and availability.

The eDNA Sampler helps inform decision makers on vital biodiversity parameters. I am very much looking forward to gettin...
17/09/2025

The eDNA Sampler helps inform decision makers on vital biodiversity parameters.

I am very much looking forward to getting up there and presenting this market leading solution at the upcoming Aberdeen Renewables Energy (AREG) SME Showcase. Held at the Aberdeen Sandman Signature Hotel on Tuesday 30th September, our presentation is titled ‘The eDNA Sampler - Automated Biodiversity Monitoring’ and we aim to inform attendees who wish to learn about innovative technologies in the renewable energy sector. If you want a discuss the eDNA Samper, please visit us on Stand No. 15

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