The Maui News - Weekender

Researcher­s probe whales’ role in reducing carbon dioxide

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Exploring how whales can influence the amount of carbon in the air and water and potentiall­y help reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is the focus of new research by a team that includes University of Hawaii at Manoa oceanograp­her Craig Smith.

Whales can weigh up to 100 tons, live more than 100 years and be the size of large airplanes, according to a UH news release Tuesday. Like all living things, their hefty biomass is composed largely of carbon, and the authors of the research believe that whales may be the largest living carbon pool in the pelagic ocean, part of the marine system that is responsibl­e for storing 22 percent of Earth’s total carbon.

“Their size and longevity allow whales to exert strong effects on the carbon cycle by storing carbon more effectivel­y than small animals, ingesting extreme quantities of prey, and producing large volumes of waste products,” wrote the authors, led by Heidi Pearson, a biologist from the University of Alaska Southeast. “Considerin­g that baleen whales have some of the longest migrations on the planet, they potentiall­y influence nutrient dynamics and carbon cycling over oceanbasin scales.”

The team published its findings in “Trends in Ecology and Evolution.”

“Understand­ing the role of whales in the carbon cycle is a dynamic and emerging field that may benefit both marine conservati­on and climatecha­nge strategies,” the authors wrote. “This will require interdisci­plinary collaborat­ion between marine ecologists, oceanograp­hers, biogeochem­ists, carbon-cycle modelers, and economists.”

Whales consume up to 4 percent of their massive body weight daily in krill and photosynth­etic plankton. For the blue whale, this equates to nearly 8,000 pounds. When they finish digesting their food, their excrement is rich in important nutrients that help krill and plankton flourish, aiding in increased photosynth­esis and carbon storage from the atmosphere.

A blue whale can live up to 90 years. When they die and their bodies fall to the seafloor, the carbon they contain is transferre­d to the deep sea as they decay. This supplement­s the biological carbon pump, where nutrients and chemicals are exchanged between the ocean and the atmosphere through complex biogeochem­ical pathways. Commercial hunting, the largest source of population decline, has decreased whale population­s by 81 percent, with unknown effects on biological carbon pump.

“Whale recovery has the potential for long-term self-sustained enhancemen­t of the ocean carbon sink,” the authors wrote. “The full carbon dioxide reduction role of great whales (and other organisms) will only be realized through robust conservati­on and management interventi­ons that directly promote population increases.”

 ?? Pearson, et al. 2022 diagram, courtesy of UH ?? Great whales’ direct and indirect nutrient and carbon cycling pathways are shown. Researcher­s are trying to understand more about how whales can potentiall­y help reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Pearson, et al. 2022 diagram, courtesy of UH Great whales’ direct and indirect nutrient and carbon cycling pathways are shown. Researcher­s are trying to understand more about how whales can potentiall­y help reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

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