News | National
1 Oct 2024 12:40
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    As the oceans warm, deep-living algae are thriving – with major potential effects for the marine ecosystem

    Tiny phytoplankton have an outsized influence on the entire ocean.

    Johan Viljoen, Postdoctoral Researcher in Biological Oceanography, University of Exeter, Bob Brewin, Associate Professor, Earth & Environmental Science, University of Exeter, Xuerong Sun, Postdoctoral Research Associate, Marine Science, University of Exe
    The Conversation


    Below the surface of the oceans, microscopic algae known as phytoplankton are growing as the world warms. That’s one finding of our new study, published in Nature Climate Change, which provides the first long-term account, over more than three decades, of phytoplankton that live beyond the sight of ocean-monitoring satellites.

    These tiny algae are found at the bottom of the marine food web. They’re eaten by slightly larger zooplankton (microscopic animals), which are eaten by small fish, then bigger fish, and so on. Any changes to phytoplankton will therefore ripple through the entire marine ecosystem all the way to the sharks and whales at the top. That’s why it’s crucial we know how they are responding to climate change.

    More than 70% of the sunlit global ocean is stratified into at least two layers, either permanently or seasonally. Likewise, these microscopic organisms exist in two distinct layers: surface phytoplankton in the well-lit, turbulent upper ocean, and those that live deeper, where there is little light but plenty of nutrients.

    Microscopic view of plankton
    There are around 25,000 different species of phytoplankton. lego 19861111 / shutterstock

    The surface phytoplankton are easily monitored by satellites, which can detect them based on the colour of the ocean and are able to observe vast areas in real time. Yet these satellites can only capture what’s happening with phytoplankton in the upper 50 metres or so, even in the clearest waters. Deeper phytoplankton are not routinely monitored with satellites, and we still know very little about them.

    This is a serious limitation. Deeper phytoplankton make up a large portion (thought to be around 10%-30%) of the total phytoplankton biomass. Despite the low light, the supply of nutrients from below means they produce a significant portion of new biomass created in the oceans through photosynthesis, and their “blooms” (sudden increases in collective biomass) can last longer than their surface counterparts.

    Decades of data

    To investigate both layers of phytoplankton we used 33 years of ship-sampled data from a location near Bermuda in the Sargasso Sea, an usually calm region in the middle of several major currents in the North Atlantic. This is one of only a few places in the world where this data has been routinely collected over such a long time.

    Map of the Sargasso Sea
    The Sargasso Sea is bounded by four major Atlantic currents. US FWS

    We then used a new two-layer modelling tool to analyse the ocean’s surface and subsurface separately. We found that deep-living phytoplankton are increasing their collective biomass in response to warming in the North Atlantic, especially as warming has accelerated over the past decade.

    Surface phytoplankton, meanwhile, have reduced their chlorophyll levels and are appearing less green. This could be due to them becoming accustomed to higher levels of light near the surface, as warmer surface waters tend to mix less with those below, keeping them in brighter conditions for longer periods. This could also be due to greener species of phytoplankton being outcompeted by those better adapted to the brighter, low-nutrient conditions at the surface. These species typically produce less chlorophyll, leading to a less green overall phytoplankton community.

    These shifts could have wide-reaching effects on marine ecosystems and the way the ocean can remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. We speculate that the deep community of phytoplankton may support a different food web than the community at the surface, and may contribute a significant fraction of the organic matter that sinks deeper into the ocean as “marine snow”.

    All this is why monitoring this “invisible forest” of phytoplankton below the surface is crucial, as it remains hidden from satellites and these changes might otherwise go unnoticed.

    The next step is to use floating ocean robots, to monitor phytoplankton at greater depths, complementing satellite data. These robots already exist and are providing valuable data from below the ocean surface, beyond the reach of satellites. Other technologies include lidar satellites with deeper views. However, like the robots, they haven’t yet been operating for long enough to fully capture long-term trends in deep-living phytoplankton.

    The Conversation

    Johan Viljoen receives funding from a UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Future Leader Fellowship awarded to Bob Brewin. Oceanographic data used in this study were acquired freely from the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS) programme. We sincerely thank and acknowledge all the researchers, technicians and data managers who contributed to the BATS site for the profound wealth of data produced since sampling started.

    Bob Brewin receives funding from a UK Research and Innovation Future Leader Fellowship (MR/V022792/1).

    Xuerong Sun receives funding from a UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Future Leader Fellowship awarded to Bob Brewin.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2024 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     01 Oct: Rotorua Hospital's refurbished Children's Unit has opened today
     01 Oct: They've produced some of the Crusaders best talent in recent years - but a regular season Super Rugby match held in the Tasman region appears slim to unlikely
     01 Oct: Water enthusiasts are invited to have their say on a navigation safety bylaw in the Queenstown Lakes district
     01 Oct: Voters without kids are in the political spotlight – but they’re not all the same
     01 Oct: Why it’s becoming harder to get super-rich in China
     01 Oct: Changes are on the cards to help improve wildlife protection in Canterbury's Waimakariri District
     01 Oct: Luke Georgeson has been promoted to Otago cricket captain after just one season
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    They've produced some of the Crusaders best talent in recent years - but a regular season Super Rugby match held in the Tasman region appears slim to unlikely More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Insurers are asking the Government to ensure new RMA rules prohibit building in "dumb" places More...



     Today's News

    Motoring:
    Captain Chris Wood will feature for the All Whites as their road to the 2026 Football World Cup starts this month 12:37

    Politics:
    Rotorua Hospital's refurbished Children's Unit has opened today 12:27

    International:
    Israel confirms it is is conducting 'limited operations' in Lebanon as ground invasion appears imminent 12:17

    Business:
    Insurers are asking the Government to ensure new RMA rules prohibit building in "dumb" places 12:17

    Entertainment:
    George Clooney is always "so proud" of his wife 12:09

    Rugby:
    They've produced some of the Crusaders best talent in recent years - but a regular season Super Rugby match held in the Tasman region appears slim to unlikely 11:57

    Entertainment:
    Anya Taylor-Joy's "love story" with husband Malcolm McRae was sewn onto her wedding dress 11:39

    Living & Travel:
    New research reveals why the mighty Darling River is drying up – and it’s not just because we’re taking too much water 11:17

    International:
    When is the Walz-Vance vice-presidential debate? Here's how to watch in Australia, and what to look out for 11:17

    Entertainment:
    Melanie Hamrick believes she has a good relationship with Sir Mick Jagger's older children and "hopefully they like" her 11:09


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd