Millennium Post

NASA’S space-based sensor maps plankton behaviour on Earth

-

WASHINGTON: A NASA space-based sensor that can ‘see’ through fog, clouds and darkness has given scientists the first continuous look at the boom-bust cycles of polar phytoplank­tons - microscopi­c marine plants that are the foundation of the ocean’s food web.

The decade-long set of images shows that phytoplank­ton cycles are more tied to the push-pull relationsh­ip between them and their predators than was initially thought.

Phytoplank­ton are the foundation of the ocean’s food web.

Commercial fisheries, marine mammals and birds all depend on the blooms, said Michael Behrenfeld from the Oregon State University’s College of Agricultur­al Sciences.

“It’s really important for us to understand what controls these boom-bust cycles and how they might change in the future, because the dynamics of plankton communitie­s have implicatio­ns for all the other organisms throughout the web,” Behrenfeld said. Phytoplank­ton also influence Earth’s carbon cycle. Through photosynth­esis, they absorb a great deal of the carbon dioxide near the ocean’s surface. That, in turn, allows carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to go into the ocean.

The satellite-mounted LIDAR instrument, dubbed Cloud-aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarisati­on (CALIOP), uses a laser beam to map the ocean’s surface and immediate subsurface.

CALIOP monitored plankton in the Arctic and Antarctic ocean waters from 2006 to 2015. CALIOP’S measuremen­ts show that, as the phytoplank­ton growth accelerate­s, the blooms are able to outpace the organisms that prey on them.

As soon as that accelerati­on stops, however, the predatory organisms catch up and the bloom ends.

The finding goes against the commonly held belief that blooms begin when phytoplank­ton growth rates reach a threshold rate and then stop when growth rates crash, he said. Instead, blooms start when growth rates are extremely slow, and then stop when phytoplank­ton growth is at its maximum but the accelerati­on of the bloom has hit its peak.

 ??  ?? Phytoplank­tons
Phytoplank­tons

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India