Variations in nutrient availability in the world’s oceans could be a vital component of future environmental change, according to a multi-author review paper involving scientists from the University of Southampton.
The paper, published this month in Nature Geoscience, reviews what we know about ocean nutrient patterns and interactions, and how they might be influenced by future climate change and other man-made factors. The authors also highlight how nutrient cycles influence climate by fuelling biological production, hence keeping carbon dioxide (CO2) locked down in the ocean away from the atmosphere.
Dr Mark Moore, Principal Research Fellow from the University of Southampton, led the review. He says: “We aimed to get a group of international experts together in an attempt to define the current state of knowledge in this rapidly developing field.”
Marine algae, which support most marine ecosystems, need certain resources to grow and reproduce – including nutrients. If there are not enough nutrients available, the growth or abundance of these microscopic plants can become restricted. This is known as ‘nutrient limitation’.
“All organisms, from the smallest microbes, up to complex multi-cellular animals like us, require a variety of chemical elements to survive. Somehow we all have to get these elements from our external environment,” explains Dr Moore, who is based at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS).
Nutrients are therefore a key driver of microbial activity in the oceans. But at the same time, micro-organisms play a major role in cycling nutrients and carbon throughout the vast ocean system – including drawing down CO2 from the atmosphere. Therefore understanding ocean nutrient cycling is important for predicting future environmental change.
Dr Moore adds: “Despite many decades of research, we still don’t understand some of the complex interactions between marine microorganisms and nutrient cycles.
“Human activity has the potential to profoundly impact oceanic nutrient cycles. A solid understanding of complex feedbacks in the system will be required if we are going to be able to predict the consequences of these changes.”
The authors – from 22 different institutes – call for an interdisciplinary approach merging new analytical techniques, observations and models going forward to address current gaps in our understanding.
The review resulted from a workshop, hosted at NOCS, as part of the International Geosphere–Biosphere Programme/Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research (IGBP-SCOR) funded Fast Track Initiative on Upper Ocean Nutrient Limitation.
Apr 10 2013
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