Massive
Die-off in the Pacific
From RIA Novosti (Sputnik News)
"A
mystery seems to be perplexing many people across the world. All over
the so-called Ring of Fire, which are the countries that share the
Pacific Ocean, sea life and animal wildlife have been dying in record
numbers, but no one seems to know why.
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The
living, breathing ocean
The
ocean is a complex ecosystem. The ocean carbon cycle is governed by
the relationship among carbon, nutrients and oxygen, and the ratio
between certain elements is key to understanding ocean respiration.
26
November, 2014
The
ocean is a complex ecosystem. The ocean carbon cycle is governed by
the relationship among carbon, nutrients and oxygen, and the ratio
between certain elements is key to understanding ocean respiration.
Phytoplankton
-- photosynthesizing microscopic organisms inhabiting the upper
sunlit layer of the ocean -- play an important role in governing
carbon, nutrients and oxygen cycles. A new study by UC Santa
Barbara's Timothy DeVries and Curtis Deutsch of the University of
Washington reveals a threefold variation across latitudes in the
ratio of oxygen consumed to phosphorus released during organic matter
respiration. The findings, which appear today in the journal Nature
Geoscience, demonstrate how climate change might affect the ratio of
carbon, oxygen and nutrients in the subsurface ocean.
Just
like trees and plants on Earth's surface, phytoplankton take up
nutrients and carbon, which are processed and released as organic
matter that sinks to the ocean's subsurface. In this study, DeVries
and Deutsch focused primarily on the depth of 200 meters, which is
below the photic zone. With no light no photosynthesis can occur.
Once again mimicking the biological processes that take place on
Earth's surface, marine microbes in the ocean consume the organic
matter and use oxygen to respire it.
The
scientists estimated how much oxygen the microbes used per unit of
phosphorus they have consumed, expressed as a ratio, O2:P. "The
interesting thing we see is that this ratio varies a great deal,"
said DeVries, a newly appointed assistant professor in UCSB's
Department of Geography and at the campus's Earth Research Institute.
"We're
not able to determine what varies the ratio, but just based on basic
chemistry and biology, we know that it's probably in large part due
to variations in the carbon-to-phosphorus ratio of the organic matter
that the microbes are consuming," DeVries added. "So a high
C:P ratio would correlate with a high O2:P ratio of respiration. The
more carbon there is in the organic matter, the more oxygen it takes
to respire it.
We're
quite confident that the O2:P ratio of microbial respiration that
we're seeing correlates with the C:P ratio of the phytoplankton.
There have been measurements of this in the surface ocean and those
measurements correlate to what we're seeing in the subsurface."
Such
ratios, known as stoichiometry, describe the relative quantities of
reactants and products in chemical reactions. The ocean circulation
model and global climatologies of oxygen and phosphate used by
DeVries and Deutsch allowed them to detect strong regional
variabilities in the ratios of respired oxygen and phosphorus in the
subsurface ocean. Previous analyses were unable to detect these
variations because of the highly simplified ways they represented
ocean mixing processes. In addition, the researchers said that ratio
variations show close correlation with environmental conditions in
the surface ocean.
Central
to the team's modeling results is how these spatial variations
correlate with different ocean surface biomes or ecosystems.
According to DeVries, some surface areas of the ocean contain few
nutrients but an abundance of sunlight; other areas manifest the
opposite combination: low light and plenty of nutrients.
"One
of the reasons this is important is that in an ocean growing warmer
under climate change, we expect an increase in regions of the ocean
that have more light and are nutrient poor," DeVries said.
"Based on these patterns, we expect that will shift the
phytoplankton community to a higher C:P ratio. If there is a shift
toward this regime, there's going to be more carbon stored in the
ocean than the corresponding situation in which there is no shift."
That
is actually a good thing, DeVries noted. Phytoplankton taking up more
carbon because they are exposed to more light and fewer nutrients
could help offset the predicted slowdown of the ocean's uptake of
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. "As the Earth's climate
warms, it will cause the oceans to stratify and reduce their capacity
to take up CO2, causing warming to accelerate even faster,"
DeVries continued. "This shift in C:P ratios that we predict
could slow the acceleration slightly, but not halt it entirely."
A
related issue is how oceanic oxygen levels will change in the future.
"As the ocean warms and the water holds less oxygen, low-oxygen
regions are going to expand, and this will put a great deal of stress
on marine animals," DeVries concluded. "How much they
expand and whether we can predict the extent is going to depend on
the types of stoichiometric variability we see in this study."
Story
Source:
The
above story is based on materials provided
by University
of California - Santa Barbara.
The original article was written by Julie Cohen. Note:
Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Tim DeVries, Curtis Deutsch. Large-scale variations in the stoichiometry of marine organic matter respiration. Nature Geoscience, 2014; DOI:10.1038/ngeo2300
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