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From at least 1905 through the end of WWII antifouling and anticorrosion methods are constantly proposed and tested by the USN.
Paint technology is still an active field, especially with the ban on tributyltin compounds in 2008 by IMO. There's a host of foul release and anti-fouling paints avaible, each with their (dis)advantages. Zinc anodes are---by the way---not to counter oxidation, but to prevent electrochemical corrosion. The potential from various metals in a seawater solution leads to a bit of current, dissolved the least noble material. This is usual iron (used initially to nail the cupper plates to old hulls), with the brass propeller acting as the main source of the electrical potential problem. Zinc is only used as a sacrifical material on passive systems to be dissolved first, with active-current systems on more modern ships. It stands separately from anti-fouling technology.
Slip-release coatins are non-toxix, so that most fouling is washed away as the ships sails. This helps against grasses and shellfish, but not against slime formation.