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by Staff Writers Los Angeles CA (SPX) Apr 01, 2022
Call them hitchhikers, the microbes that latch onto particles at the ocean's surface have a big job. They ride along until they reach the bottom, transferring carbon to the deepest waters of the ocean. The journey can take weeks to months, though estimating the rate has been a challenge- until now. ? A USC-led team of international scientists has found that the speed of this carbon transfer is influenced by the size and type of bacteria that latch onto the particles. The discovery has enabled researchers to develop a computer model for estimating carbon transfer, a part of the Earth's natural carbon cycle to stabilize its climate, in oceans across the globe. That discovery, published Monday in the journal Nature Communications, sheds greater light on how carbon - including pollution from cars - moves from the atmosphere into the ocean, and ultimately makes its way into the deep ocean, said Naomi Levine, an assistant professor of biological sciences, quantitative and computational biology and Earth sciences at USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. Knowing the carbon transfer rate could help scientists better understand just how well the Earth is retaining carbon in the deepest parts of its oceans - or whether much of the carbon that normally would sink is returning to the atmosphere, Levine said. "This is the first time that we've been able to build a model to predict ocean-scale carbon-cycle dynamics that accounts for these micro-scale processes that have been observed in the lab," Levine said. "We show that the processes matter a lot." Because of microbes' outsized role in transferring carbon, scientists are interested in also understanding their colonies and survivability. Without them, "carbon falls deeper into the ocean. This impacts how much CO2 stays in the atmosphere," Levine said.
Some like it hot The research team found that the rate of carbon sinking in the ocean - and the depth at which the transfer occurs - also depends on how far down the bacteria travel on the ride of their lives. For some bacteria, it's a relatively short trip and, unlike those half-eaten particles, they never make it to the deep ocean, which is more than 1,000 meters from the surface. Healthy colonies of bacteria, on the other hand, raise the potential that the carbon - released as the hungry hitchhikers munch on particles - stays in the surface ocean and returns to the atmosphere. "There is a lot of mortality or death with these bacteria. That impacts the rate at which they can break these particles down," said Trang Nguyen, a study co-author who is a USC Dornsife post-doctoral research associate. "By breaking down the particles, they also release nitrogen and phosphorous back into the ecosystem, which is a critical part of the cycling of these elements." And knowing which bacteria live in which locations of the oceans could also help scientists adjust the model to better predict a local rate of carbon transfer - or release, depending on whether the bacteria are thriving or not.
Research Report: "Microbes contribute to setting the ocean carbon flux by altering the fate of sinking particulates"
First-of-its-kind detection of reduced human CO2 emissions Greenbelt MD (SPX) Apr 01, 2022 For the first time, researchers have spotted short-term, regional fluctuations in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) across the globe due to emissions from human activities. Using a combination of NASA satellites and atmospheric modeling, the scientists performed a first-of-its-kind detection of human CO2 emissions changes. The new study uses data from NASA's Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) to measure drops in CO2 emissions during the COVID-19 pandemic from space. With daily and monthly data p ... read more
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