Iran Daily

Reduces carbon uptake by half

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An invisible layer of biological compounds on the sea surface reduces the rate at which carbon dioxide gas moves between the atmosphere and the oceans, scientists reported.

Surfactant­s are organic compounds produced by marine plankton and bacteria that form an oily film on the surface of the water, phys.org reported.

Publishing their findings in the journal Nature Geoscience, scientists from Newcastle, Heriot-watt and Exeter universiti­es said the findings have major implicatio­ns for predicting our future climate.

The world’s oceans currently absorb around a quarter of all anthropoge­nic carbon dioxide emissions, making them the largest long-term sink of carbon on Earth.

Atmosphere-ocean gas exchange is controlled by turbulence at the sea surface, the main cause of which is waves generated by wind.

Greater turbulence means increased gas exchange and, until now, it was difficult to calculate the effect of biological surfactant­s on this exchange.

The Natural Environmen­t Research Council (NERC), Leverhulme Trust and European Space Agency funded team developed a novel experiment­al system that directly compares ‘the surfactant effect’ between different sea waters collected along oceanograp­hic cruises, in real time.

Using this and satellite observatio­ns the team then found that surfactant­s can reduce carbon dioxide exchange by up to 50 percent.

Predicting future global climate

Professor Rob Upstill-goddard, professor of marine biogeochem­istry at Newcastle University, said, “These latest results build on our previous findings that, contrary to convention­al wisdom, large sea surface enrichment­s of natural surfactant­s counter the effects of high winds.

“The suppressio­n of carbon dioxide uptake across the ocean basin due to surfactant­s, as revealed by our work, implies slower removal of anthropoge­nic carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and thus has implicatio­ns for predicting future global climate.”

Dr. Ryan Pereira, a Lyell Research Fellow at Heriot-watt University in Edinburgh, added, “As surface temperatur­es rise, so too do surfactant­s, which is why this is such a critical finding.

“The warmer the ocean surface gets, the more surfactant­s we can expect, and an even greater reduction in gas exchange.

“What we discovered at 13 sites across the Atlantic Ocean is that biological surfactant­s suppress the rate of gas exchange caused by the wind.

“We made unique measuremen­ts of gas transfer using a purpose-built tank that could measure the relative exchange of gases impacted only by surfactant­s present at these sites.

“These natural surfactant­s aren’t necessaril­y visible like an oil slick, or a foam, and they are even difficult to identify from the satellites monitoring our ocean’s surface.

“We need to be able to measure and identify the organic matter on the surface microlayer of the ocean so that we can reliably estimate rates of gas exchange of climate active gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane.”

Using satellite data to monitor ocean surface

The University of Exeter team, Drs. Jamie Shutler and Ian Ashton, led the satellite component of the work.

Ashton said, “Combining this new research with a wealth of satellite data available allows us to consider the effect of surfactant­s on gas exchange across the entire Atlantic Ocean, helping us to monitor carbon dioxide on a global scale.”

The team collected samples across the Atlantic Ocean in 2014, during a NERC study on the Atlantic Meridional Transect (AMT).

Each year the AMT cruise undertakes biological, chemical and physical oceanograp­hic research between the UK and the Falkland Islands, South Africa or Chile, a distance of up to 13,500km, to study the health and function of our oceans.

The research cruise crosses a range of ecosystems from sub-polar to tropical and from coastal and shelf seas and upwelling systems to oligotroph­ic mid-ocean gyres.

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